- Oct 10, 2014
- 63
- 5
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My chicks don't fluff up. The just dry crispy..They are fine. Just look wet but are dry.
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It sounds to me that they have a bit of "sticky" chick. What was your humidity during the first 17 days of incubation. It could be a case of too high humidty.My chicks don't fluff up. The just dry crispy..They are fine. Just look wet but are dry.
Hmmmm... I do dry incubation too.I incubate dry so idk how the humidity can be too high. I have two hydrometers in there too.
I thought that overly high humidity caused chicks to grow larger. I've got to go do some reading now!!!Sticky chicks are usually caused by overly high humidity during incubation that did not allow the chick to grow as large as it should have or let the egg lose enough moisture as the chick developed, so at hatch time those chicks are coated with more liquid (albumen) than they should be. A sticky chick's movement is restricted, but the stronger chicks usually manage to hatch ok (just extra sticky). The weak chicks will expire trying to hatch because they just don't have the strength. if they can't spin, and can't zip, they expire. Sometimes that extra sticky liquid can clog the chick's nostrils (aka drowning the chick), and the sticky liquid can also cause the opening of the internally pipped membrane to glue down onto the chick's nostril shortly after they have pipped internally, suffocating it.
http://naturalchickenkeeping.blogspot.com/2013/08/shrink-wrapped-or-stickey-chicks-why.html
I thought the same...that's what I've always told people...lol.. I only quoted the article to back my suspicion it may be high humidity.I thought that overly high humidity caused chicks to grow larger. I've got to go do some reading now!!!