Hatching problems! Please help!

SilverPhoenix

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Hello everyone!

I had some issues with my hatch. Not severe ones, and I think I know what I did wrong, but I want to get some input. Please, please be gentle with me--this is my first real hatch and while I've read about everything, it's certainly a learning experience.

My first fourteen chicks hatched without a single problem. Five of my pips, however, zipped and then got stuck for well over twenty-four hours with no progress. Note they had been pipped for at least forty-eight hours, but seemed to have been stuck in one position without any progress for more than twenty-four hours. Last night, because I had read it's all right to remove chicks if you spray in the incubator as you're removing them to correct for the humidity lost, I moved the fourteen chicks to the brooder VERY quickly because they were causing all kinds of havoc in the incubator.

Today I got extremely worried, noticing the membranes of some of the zipped and stuck chicks were very strange-looking--paper-like and dark. I decided, very reluctantly mind you, to break them out instead of letting them die in there without being able to move. The humidity has been about 70-75% pretty consistently, though it did get down to 52% for just a few minutes. Was that what caused their membranes in their zipped eggs to seal--just those few minutes, even though the humidity went back up almost immediately?

Those peepers are a little out of it--have glue-y membrane on them a bit, and they're still kind of curled in a fetal position, but I'm hoping they'll correct themselves given a bit of time. Otherwise they seem all right, and mind you they had zipped on their own so it's not like they're just weaklings. It just seems like they got stuck when the membrane dried out on them and glued them in one place.

I have one duck egg left in the incubator that has pipped. Should I break him out, too? His pip is small and just occurred a few hours ago, so I feel like his membrane probably did not dry out like the chicks that had zipped (they only were dried out where the zips had taken place). I'm just trying to decide if I should let him hatch on his own (probably best...?) or just go on the offensive and break him out, too.

Anyway, any advice helping these chicks hopefully survive and what I should do about the duck egg would be much appreciated. I know this is long and kind of technical, but...please help!
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I know, I know, I know you're not supposed to help chicks. I know--but I really didn't want to let these babies die. If they die later on, so be it, I would feel worse if I hadn't tried than if I do try and they don't make it.
 
If the duck egg wasn't pipped yet when you were opening the incubator, I would give it more time to see if it will zip on it's own.
I had to help one chick out in my last hatch because he got glued when I opened the incubator to un-squish the first hatched chick who knocked the thermometer over onto himself. The one I helped out also had curled toe issues, but with a bit of tape and some physical therapy to help him stand and walk he is doing great now!
It only takes the humidity dropping for moments to dry the membrane out if there is already a pip or zip.
I was undecided about whether or not I would help a chick hatch before I started incubating. So many people for or against it, so I wasn't sure. But watching that lil guy struggling for so long, knowing he would die if I didn't help..........I had to do it.
 
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Thank you for your help!
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I think that's what I'm going to do--see if the duck egg does much on its own, and if by, say, tonight or tomorrow there's no progress at all, I'll open it up for him in case he got stuck, too.

Yes, while I understand the logic of not helping (the weak chicks will die anyway, etc.), if something goes wrong, I can't simply stand by and watch them die--especially if it's my fault to begin with. The ones I helped are doing all right, so I think I made the right decision helping them. If they don't make it, they don't make it, but so far they're fine.
 
I think you made the right decision. I would let the duck egg be.
 
Duck eggs take 28 days to hatch. How long has the duck egg been in there? The duck is probable fine:) They just take longer. I also think you did the right thing.
 
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Thank you both--I think I did the right thing, too.
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And yes, I know! The duck egg was under a broody for a week before all the chicken eggs (plus the duck egg, as the broody decided to abandon it) went in the incubator, so it has been twenty-eight days for that one.
 

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