Having a lot of bad hatches, looking for advice.

Cluckerbocker

In the Brooder
7 Years
Jun 17, 2012
26
1
22
The past 5 hatches from my own fertile eggs have all resulted in around a 33 percent or worse hatch rate. In one case (incubator)I had 75 percent hatch, then quite a few died on me with no warning on the first night. The next round of eggs from the incubator a week later, only 15 of 42 eggs hatched, and 2 of those died. I would usually attribute this to incubation problems, but even the 8 eggs under my bantam hen that came off friday only yielded 2 chicks, two died in the shell after pipping, and the others showed no signs of hatching but I havent cracked them open to see the contents yet. In the case of the first two incubator hatches almost every egg was fertile, the chicks just did not make it.

First off, I am not an expert by any stretch, I try and learn something new every day from people with more experience than I have. However, by the same token I am not completely new to hatching and raising chicks. Before this rash of bad hatches I had been seeing 75 percent or better out of the eggs I was incubating, they were not however from my own flock, as my Australorps have only been producing a few months now.

As far as I can tell, I havent had any problems with sickness in my flock, they all get a good diet of layer feed and a little free range time in the afternoons. The poop all seems consistent and fairly formed, and they're all healthy and energetic.

The only problem I have had, is a battle with mud over the past couple months. Only in the past couple weeks have I found a good source of free wood chips to help me combat the amounts of rain we have been getting lately. The eggs I incubated were from good sunny days and harvested immediately then incubated within a few days max.

Is there anything I might be missing that could be causing some of my issues? Could the overly muddy conditions have caused a problem with my eggs even though I tried to only hatch the dry and clean ones? I am open to any advice, right now I'm up for trying anything as I've invested so much time in establishing my beautiful Black Australorp flock only to find myself struggling to hatch from them.
 
My roosters are both 18 months old. They are mating with hens from a completely different bloodline.

The feed I use is Carolina Pride, it comes from a local mill out of Goldsboro NC and everyone I associate with feeds it now. I actually sell it at my own feed store. All of the other hatching eggs I get from friends come from parents eating the same stuff and so far I've had good success.

Right now I'm pretty hung up on the moisture problem. After some further testing it seems my incubators have been running with high humidity. I dont know if maybe because the eggs Ive gotten from other people have come from drier conditions, that the higher humidity didnt handicap them as much? I don't really know if that would have an effect or not, I'm just grasping at straws at this point. My thinking is that if the eggs were already abnormally moist it would be even harder to achieve a good hatch with an incubator operating at high humidity.
 
We have jersey giants, am told by others that it wont hurt to punch up the protein in their feed -- So we use 50/50 all purpose poultry pellets (20%) with gamebird starter (24%) and provide oyster shell on the side. The young hens (they are 11 and 12 months old this month) have been laying well and am pleased that we did get 4 new chicks out of 8 eggs we set under our broody (2 got crushed) - we couldnt get her moved outa the nest box....
We use Bar-ale feed its what is popular locally out here....we are in the Sierra foothills, west coast...
 
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