After two quite successful hatches I've gotten a bit discouraged this week. I've had two pretty much miserable hatches.
I got 18 GORGEOUS blue Ameraucana eggs from PipsandPeeps, and I had high hopes. All were fertile, and 13 developed to lockdown.
One pipped early, in the middle of the shell, and then died. One hatched naturally. Four I helped out to varying degrees. They're all still alive, and three are doing very well. One of those is having some leg issues.
I kept my temp at 99.5 with no spikes, and humidity between 20-30% for the first 18 days. At lockdown I raised the temp to 100.5 to 101 and humidity hovered around 80+%.
The chicks I had to help, or that pipped and died were shrink wrapped to some degree, some quite severely. The ones that didn't pip, I cracked open. Some where shrink wrapped tight, with the membrane white and stiff, while others were positively swimming and clearly had drowned.
Is this just typical of shipped eggs? There are so many variables that I don't know how to fix it. Was my humidity too low to start, and too high to finish? Any insight would be appreciated.
I've gotten a few chicks out of my last two hatches, and maybe that's all that can be expected from shipped eggs. Of course I had hoped for more.
(disclaimer- I know there's nothing "natural" about helping a chick to hatch, but in my mind there's nothing natural about taking an egg, bubble wrapping it, subjecting 5,000 miles via the postal service, putting it in a heated styrofoam and plastic box with a home depot thermometer and expecting it to hatch perfectly. If I had a broody right now, I'd let nature be nature, but I'm certain the mistakes were all mine, and not genetic flaws)
I got 18 GORGEOUS blue Ameraucana eggs from PipsandPeeps, and I had high hopes. All were fertile, and 13 developed to lockdown.
One pipped early, in the middle of the shell, and then died. One hatched naturally. Four I helped out to varying degrees. They're all still alive, and three are doing very well. One of those is having some leg issues.
I kept my temp at 99.5 with no spikes, and humidity between 20-30% for the first 18 days. At lockdown I raised the temp to 100.5 to 101 and humidity hovered around 80+%.
The chicks I had to help, or that pipped and died were shrink wrapped to some degree, some quite severely. The ones that didn't pip, I cracked open. Some where shrink wrapped tight, with the membrane white and stiff, while others were positively swimming and clearly had drowned.
Is this just typical of shipped eggs? There are so many variables that I don't know how to fix it. Was my humidity too low to start, and too high to finish? Any insight would be appreciated.
I've gotten a few chicks out of my last two hatches, and maybe that's all that can be expected from shipped eggs. Of course I had hoped for more.
(disclaimer- I know there's nothing "natural" about helping a chick to hatch, but in my mind there's nothing natural about taking an egg, bubble wrapping it, subjecting 5,000 miles via the postal service, putting it in a heated styrofoam and plastic box with a home depot thermometer and expecting it to hatch perfectly. If I had a broody right now, I'd let nature be nature, but I'm certain the mistakes were all mine, and not genetic flaws)
