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Hatch-Along - Setting eggs this weekend (Jan5/6) WHOS WITH ME!

awwww...I just got my new Brinsea MiniAdvanced today. Guess their shipping dept was still holiday-groggy. I did get 6 eggs in my weekly CSA bin--she runs her hens with a few roos so they are likely to be fertile-- and I put 1 fertilized egg from Trader Joe's in for fun. I'll play along, but I'm behind. Not really expecting a lot but hey, I have a new toy! :)

Leslie
You will LOVE this new toy!! I have a Brinsea Mini Advance and it is the easiest plug and play bator in the world!! My first hatch was 7/7 and so far I'm 6/7 this go round.. I have one that is questionable but it is a very porous egg so not the incubator's fault. :)
 
Evidently she thought the egg in the front was getting too cool.... so she shuffled it to the middle for a bit. We've seen her do this many times, but finally managed to get the recording thing figured out.

I love her 'broody shuffle' after she sits back down....
 
OK... gonna try to add a video.
We caught Gracie on tape doing some rearranging, never saw a similar video clip on here yet, that I recall, so thought I'd share.
WOW that is great! I've had hens go broody & raise a clutch several times, but never gotten to view their secret egg rotating actions.
Her wiggling her fluff back down so carefully around the clutch at the end is too cute.
 
Loved the video also!

I candled just a bit go and I see a whole lot of veining going on! Some were still clear but was expected. Some of the eggs were held from before Christmas and it's been very cold here and I only collected eggs twice a day. Very excited! I did notice that the Silver Spangled Hamburgs were 100 percent veining. The green eggs I couldn't see anything and the blue eggs I could see the air sac. Going to wait a few more days and then document everything. Sue
 
Evidently she thought the egg in the front was getting too cool.... so she shuffled it to the middle for a bit. We've seen her do this many times, but finally managed to get the recording thing figured out.

I love her 'broody shuffle' after she sits back down....
I love the broody shuffle as well. She's adorable!!! Go Gracie Go!!!
 
This could be from what I was talking about earlier. Your eggs on top are slowing development of the ones below by blocking the heat. This is why I suggested rotating the top layer down & the eggs under to the top every few days to help even out temp averages. Personally, when I stack eggs I rotate every time I turn, but I'm also hand turning so this is pretty easy to do. I simply lift the top egg out & trade it with 1 from a random space in the bottom making sure I flip it to the "turned" side marking so I don't accidentally rotate it back to a top spot in that turning. By doing this, no egg gets stuck in the "hot spot" for too long & none stay in the "cold spots" either. It helps even development & avoid dead babies.
I was thinking this might be the case as well. I did some research this morning, and found a video where a woman demonstrated how to fit a lot more eggs on the bottom level of the Brinsea by removing the dividers. So I rearranged, and was amazed to find I could fit 29 eggs on the bottom row without the dividers! Previously, I could only fit 24, with 6 stacked on top. As I was finding a way to stack the last remaining egg on top, I noticed one of the bottom layer had a tiny crack, so I replaced it with the loose egg. Not sure if I cracked it while I was candling or rearranging. Thankfully, it was one I had marked to likely be infertile. So now I have 29 eggs, all neatly arranged in a single row. There's always a learning curve with a new incubator.
 
So today our humidity has been very touchy...we've been trying to keep it between 35-40% but it keeps going up to 42% even after we have taken water out of the troughs at the bottom. Hopefully this doesn't affect them too much
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Ours has been very touchy too. We are doing a dry hatch and our humidity has risen to 50%. This is mainly because is has been raining for the last couple of days. Besides removing all of the water from your trays I don't know what else you can do. A wise member on this thread assured me that broody hens hatch chicks all the time in areas where the humidity is very high. Put my mind at ease a little bit. Short of turning on the air conditioning in the middle of winter, I don't know what else to do :(. I think as long as it stays below 50 you should be ok.
 
Ours has been very touchy too. We are doing a dry hatch and our humidity has risen to 50%. This is mainly because is has been raining for the last couple of days. Besides removing all of the water from your trays I don't know what else you can do. A wise member on this thread assured me that broody hens hatch chicks all the time in areas where the humidity is very high. Put my mind at ease a little bit. Short of turning on the air conditioning in the middle of winter, I don't know what else to do :(. I think as long as it stays below 50 you should be ok.
All you really CAN do is remove all of your water. The only time I have really had problems with humidity even doing a dry hatch was this past summer when my basement got flooded about 3-4 times during incubation & that's where my bators were. With it being so hot out it raised the humidity thru the roof & my poor chicks didn't even begin to develop since it was right at the beginning of incubation. I lost about 12 dozen eggs in 5 bators. The bad part was that most of them were shipped eggs, so I lost a fortune. My bators no longer live in the basement & other than some temp issues during my recent move hatching has gone quite well with just using the ambient humidity in the house until lockdown. I'll be honest, only 1 of my bators even has a hygrometer on it & it's built in or it wouldn't be there either. All I really monitor is temps to keep them in the 100-101F range, add a bowl of hot water when I get my 1st pip when running a staggered hatch or at lockdown when using 1 bator for hatching only. The only time I add water during incubation is if I candle & my air cells are getting to big too fast. That is the best indicator of what your humidity is doing. Someone posted the air cell chart earlier in this post I think. If not, Sally Sunshine has it in MANY of her threads. It is the best indicator of humidity levels you can get. Just watch your air cells & adjust humidity accordingly.
 

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