- Jun 4, 2012
- 710
- 16
- 221
Hello, Team Broody! Are you out there?
Things have gotten a little bit crazy here at the farm. The broodies were knocking the remaining eggs all around this morning while teaching the chicks to scratch. It did not look good for the remaining eggs. I decided to take action. (I started another thread, but it has been quiet, so back to my team!)
Anyway, I candled the eggs and decided 2 were very probably dead - the air cells were huge and the dark areas moved a bit jerkily. Of the other two, one marans I couldn't see anything at all - not even an air cell (might not have been dark enough in the darkest place I could find today), and the other blue actually looked still alive, but hard to tell. So, I now have the two possibly good eggs on a slightly moist heating pad, in a baking dish, lightly covered with a towel. I'm trying very hard to keep the temperature at about 99 degrees. I gave the probable bad eggs back to the broodies. I'm going to give the good eggs back at night, when things have calmed down.
What do you think? Is this crazy? It's surprisingly hard to keep the temperature constant, but there just didn't seem like any way they'd survive the activity back in the nest. It's like the broodies would remember and set on them about 80% of the time, but the remaining 20% was chaos.
Any advice is welcome!!! 7 hours short of 23 days here!
And, finally, here's the happy family as it currently stands (#2 already outgrew #1):

Things have gotten a little bit crazy here at the farm. The broodies were knocking the remaining eggs all around this morning while teaching the chicks to scratch. It did not look good for the remaining eggs. I decided to take action. (I started another thread, but it has been quiet, so back to my team!)
Anyway, I candled the eggs and decided 2 were very probably dead - the air cells were huge and the dark areas moved a bit jerkily. Of the other two, one marans I couldn't see anything at all - not even an air cell (might not have been dark enough in the darkest place I could find today), and the other blue actually looked still alive, but hard to tell. So, I now have the two possibly good eggs on a slightly moist heating pad, in a baking dish, lightly covered with a towel. I'm trying very hard to keep the temperature at about 99 degrees. I gave the probable bad eggs back to the broodies. I'm going to give the good eggs back at night, when things have calmed down.
What do you think? Is this crazy? It's surprisingly hard to keep the temperature constant, but there just didn't seem like any way they'd survive the activity back in the nest. It's like the broodies would remember and set on them about 80% of the time, but the remaining 20% was chaos.
Any advice is welcome!!! 7 hours short of 23 days here!
And, finally, here's the happy family as it currently stands (#2 already outgrew #1):