MomFoldingLaundry
Songster
- Oct 16, 2020
- 224
- 202
- 118
Hey guys. I really need some help.
So this is my second quail hatch, and I’m seeing a pattern: a few chicks hatch no problem, but then I have mostly eggs that pip or even unzip partially, and then the chicks die inside. Often, the “zip” re-zips closed. The egg shells gets flakey and falls off the membrane, but the membrane is tough.
I’ve sometimes helped the chicks out. Sometimes, they turn out fine. Once I did it to a chick too young. The rest, I got there too late.
I can’t tell which of two things is going wrong:
1. I’m opening the incubator too often during hatching. (It’s a cheap amazon incubator that measures temperature, but not humidity.)
2. My humidity is too high for the whole time my eggs are incubating.
Now, Is assumed it was okay to open the incubator a little here and there during hatching...since our background temperature is at least 80 degrees and our humidity never goes below 75%. How much cold, dry air could possibly rush in?
But maybe I’m wrong, and I’m fussing w the eggs too much?
Or perhaps the issue is that it’s really super humid here, and my chicks are “sticky” to start out with?
People seem to like to “dry hatch” quail, but even “dry” here is above the humidity needed on hatching day. :/
if it helps: with both hatches I’ve helped out chicks who had bits of shell really stuck to them. with the last one, I had to gently pry the shell off it’s back, and there was a little spot of blood where it had been glued.
Can you guys give me some guidance? Is my problem ambient humidity, or opening the Incubator? (Or perhaps a combination of both?)
So this is my second quail hatch, and I’m seeing a pattern: a few chicks hatch no problem, but then I have mostly eggs that pip or even unzip partially, and then the chicks die inside. Often, the “zip” re-zips closed. The egg shells gets flakey and falls off the membrane, but the membrane is tough.
I’ve sometimes helped the chicks out. Sometimes, they turn out fine. Once I did it to a chick too young. The rest, I got there too late.
I can’t tell which of two things is going wrong:
1. I’m opening the incubator too often during hatching. (It’s a cheap amazon incubator that measures temperature, but not humidity.)
2. My humidity is too high for the whole time my eggs are incubating.
Now, Is assumed it was okay to open the incubator a little here and there during hatching...since our background temperature is at least 80 degrees and our humidity never goes below 75%. How much cold, dry air could possibly rush in?
But maybe I’m wrong, and I’m fussing w the eggs too much?
Or perhaps the issue is that it’s really super humid here, and my chicks are “sticky” to start out with?
People seem to like to “dry hatch” quail, but even “dry” here is above the humidity needed on hatching day. :/
if it helps: with both hatches I’ve helped out chicks who had bits of shell really stuck to them. with the last one, I had to gently pry the shell off it’s back, and there was a little spot of blood where it had been glued.
Can you guys give me some guidance? Is my problem ambient humidity, or opening the Incubator? (Or perhaps a combination of both?)