How long after an egg is laid will still it show as fertile?

igorsMistress

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Hi all,

Since there's a window of opportunity to hatch eggs, is there a window of opportunity to verify fertility? I have eggs from my EE that are a couple of weeks old and I'm wondering if I can check those? Hubs gave away the more recent eggs from her to a neighbor who was in a pinch and needed some groceries.

Thanks for your help!

IM
 
Hi all,

Since there's a window of opportunity to hatch eggs, is there a window of opportunity to verify fertility? I have eggs from my EE that are a couple of weeks old and I'm wondering if I can check those? Hubs gave away the more recent eggs from her to a neighbor who was in a pinch and needed some groceries.

Thanks for your help!

IM
You should see a bulls-eye on the yolk showing that it is fertile. Here is a link. https://www.google.com/search?q=fer...AUIDygC&biw=1904&bih=960#imgrc=dkd4bZstYUf1QM: I am not for sure being as old as your eggs are if it still hold true.
 
Prior to incubation, the only way to verify fertility is by the bullseye, and it is necessary to break the egg to see that. Back in the dark ages I kept eggs longer than 2 weeks and generally had relatively high % hatches. I had one metal Sears incubator. I would fill it with eggs, incubate, hatch, disinfect and start all over again. A lot has to do with how eggs are stored. I kept them in an earthen cellar - 65 F and 50 to 60 % humidity - turning them twice daily. I'd give the eggs a try and candle around 5 to 7 days depending upon how dark the eggs are. Good luck.
 
You should see a bulls-eye on the yolk showing that it is fertile. Here is a link. https://www.google.com/search?q=fer...AUIDygC&biw=1904&bih=960#imgrc=dkd4bZstYUf1QM: I am not for sure being as old as your eggs are if it still hold true.

Thanks drchickens! I didn't want to crack the egg if it wouldn't show anything after a period of time. We have a match.

Prior to incubation, the only way to verify fertility is by the bullseye, and it is necessary to break the egg to see that. Back in the dark ages I kept eggs longer than 2 weeks and generally had relatively high % hatches. I had one metal Sears incubator. I would fill it with eggs, incubate, hatch, disinfect and start all over again. A lot has to do with how eggs are stored. I kept them in an earthen cellar - 65 F and 50 to 60 % humidity - turning them twice daily. I'd give the eggs a try and candle around 5 to 7 days depending upon how dark the eggs are. Good luck.

Thanks Sour. I'm planning for the Easter HAL. I checked, definitely fertile so hopefully she'll start laying more consistently soon.
 

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