ZawbytheSea
In the Brooder
- Oct 30, 2022
- 9
- 42
- 44
In need of advice! I recently had a very complicated hatch, resulting in four mixed bantams - hen Rocky is a partridge bantam, single comb, slate legs) and roo Tidbit is a gold sebright.
Rocky went broody for the second time this year, her first season. She was so insistent, I finally gave in and let her set on the eggs. The nights got very cold, and I was concerned, but let it go. She made it to almost three weeks, then just decided she had had enough, and rejoined the flock
Now I had 12 eggs, 5 of which were both fertilized and viable, late in growth, and we found them nearly cold. So I borrowed a still-air incubator with no egg turner, and popped them in, figuring they would hatch imminently.
Well, it took a week, probably due to the cold. With minimal turning - just shuffling them while candling. But four hatched.
The concerning thing is that one is exhibiting all the signs of “kinky back,” according to Dr. Google: head out straight, wings splayed, only walking backward. It’s also chirping very loudly - or at least it was last night, this morning when I left for work they were all pretty quiet.
I couldn’t get it to eat or drink last night, and it definitely seems distressed. When this one was zipping, it’s toe was sticking out (earning it the nickname Beans, for toe-beans), and the first chick to hatch dragged it around the incubator several times by that toe. Could that have injured it? Is it a vitamin deficiency? Not sure how it could be that from a hatchling, but then I don’t know.
I’ll admit, I had to assist this one out after almost 24 hours. I also assisted another that had taken even longer, but that one was genuinely stuck in the membrane, and has since done just fine. Wondering what could be wrong, and if I should end it’s suffering, or try harder to get it to eat and drink if it’s possible to recover.
Thank you in advance - this is my first time hatching, and it’s been a hodgepodge of chaos from start to finish!
Rocky went broody for the second time this year, her first season. She was so insistent, I finally gave in and let her set on the eggs. The nights got very cold, and I was concerned, but let it go. She made it to almost three weeks, then just decided she had had enough, and rejoined the flock

Well, it took a week, probably due to the cold. With minimal turning - just shuffling them while candling. But four hatched.
The concerning thing is that one is exhibiting all the signs of “kinky back,” according to Dr. Google: head out straight, wings splayed, only walking backward. It’s also chirping very loudly - or at least it was last night, this morning when I left for work they were all pretty quiet.
I couldn’t get it to eat or drink last night, and it definitely seems distressed. When this one was zipping, it’s toe was sticking out (earning it the nickname Beans, for toe-beans), and the first chick to hatch dragged it around the incubator several times by that toe. Could that have injured it? Is it a vitamin deficiency? Not sure how it could be that from a hatchling, but then I don’t know.
I’ll admit, I had to assist this one out after almost 24 hours. I also assisted another that had taken even longer, but that one was genuinely stuck in the membrane, and has since done just fine. Wondering what could be wrong, and if I should end it’s suffering, or try harder to get it to eat and drink if it’s possible to recover.

Thank you in advance - this is my first time hatching, and it’s been a hodgepodge of chaos from start to finish!