Hi All,
I am new to your forum, although I read some of these posts pretty frequently when I am internet searching poultry stuff.
I am going to try and hatch my first batch of Guinea eggs and I want to include a batch of rare breed chickens in the hatch.
I have a home built red cabinet incubator, based on GFQ design and parts. I will hold 100's of eggs...that is I would never attempt to hatch as many as I could in there, but I have 5 shelves/levels to work with. It is set to exactly 100 degrees in the middle right now, although top shelf is more like 101, bottom shelf, 98.5. Fan is on top, contained, although vent holes are available.
The thing is this, I keep reading that Guineas need to have 50-60% humidity, and even higher the last few days. But I have found with hatching the chicks that I get a better hatch rate keeping it closer to 35%, or whatever the room humidity is, no water in pan. Then, I raise it right at the end of the hatch to prevent stuck chick syndrome. At one time, I followed instructions to keep 50-60% for chicks, and after about 3 hatches with high percentages of cripples and dead-in-shell/drown chicks, I switched to the dry hatch method and had better success.
Does anyone have experience hatching Guineas and Chicks together? What did you find to be the ideal medium humidity and temp levels to be? Any advice, success or failure stories?
Thanks,
Jeanne
I am new to your forum, although I read some of these posts pretty frequently when I am internet searching poultry stuff.
I am going to try and hatch my first batch of Guinea eggs and I want to include a batch of rare breed chickens in the hatch.
I have a home built red cabinet incubator, based on GFQ design and parts. I will hold 100's of eggs...that is I would never attempt to hatch as many as I could in there, but I have 5 shelves/levels to work with. It is set to exactly 100 degrees in the middle right now, although top shelf is more like 101, bottom shelf, 98.5. Fan is on top, contained, although vent holes are available.
The thing is this, I keep reading that Guineas need to have 50-60% humidity, and even higher the last few days. But I have found with hatching the chicks that I get a better hatch rate keeping it closer to 35%, or whatever the room humidity is, no water in pan. Then, I raise it right at the end of the hatch to prevent stuck chick syndrome. At one time, I followed instructions to keep 50-60% for chicks, and after about 3 hatches with high percentages of cripples and dead-in-shell/drown chicks, I switched to the dry hatch method and had better success.
Does anyone have experience hatching Guineas and Chicks together? What did you find to be the ideal medium humidity and temp levels to be? Any advice, success or failure stories?
Thanks,
Jeanne