Fun Factoid: Did You Know A Broody Hen Turns Her Eggs 69 Times A Day?
Crazy.
Crazy.
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I had no idea???
What hours should I turn them then?
The more times you turn the better according to studies... truly... with 3 times being the minimum suggested. There's a difference between always having chicks hatch and having your best hatch possible. Overkill for you maybe, probably good for your embryos.
Even turning # not usually recommended as it would leave the embryo resting in the same place every night... I suppose the exact 12 hour thing probably at least leaves the embryo at those locations for equal periods of time... but you will not get your BEST hatch doing that... we all have different goals... mine isn't just hatching but getting the maximum number of live chicks per setting.
I also use a turner now, but got my best hatches when hand turning. I think they got more attention somehow. And there has been evidence showing the slight cooling (temp fluctuation) might even increase hatch rate. I used to worry about opening my top before realizing that I'm competing with a hen who goes of for a good 15 minutes everyday, depending on weather. I usually aim for 5 times, more than the minimum of 3, but not over kill. And I have lost count or forgotten... just start again and do your best... life is a miracle and it finds a way!
Have you candled to see if you have development yet? Are these eggs from your flock? What breed/color egg? What bator are you using and where do you have your temp and humidity set?
One of my favorite hatching resources, bookmark it if you like..
Incubation guide
Do you know... compared to what?
Some links on turning...
https://academic.oup.com/ps/article/85/8/1433/1524893
https://dev.biologists.org/content/develop/5/3/293.full.pdf
This one suggest that turning frequency is more important with older flock or reduced quality eggs than young flocks...
https://www.poultryworld.net/Eggs/Articles/2017/5/Turning-frequency-during-incubation-137498E/
Hmmm... this makes me wonder now if side turners are better than upright turners... All eggs were on their side when I turned by hand and are now upright. Always good to try and help others so you can expand your own thought process as well!![]()
Sounds like she changed the method completely and turning was not the only factor. She might get even better hatches with the new method if turning was equal or increased. As ridgerunner stated, the difference may be minimal to home hatchers verses hatcheries, but I am here to do my BEST not my okay-est.I have read some scientific reports that the more times you turn an egg, the better for the chick as well if I'm being honest. I know I'm giving anecdotal evidence here, but she was saying for her that: dry incubation, turning the eggs three times a day as well as spraying the eggs when you turn them worked better for her (90% hatch rate) than turning 5+ times a day wet incubating without spraying the eggs (50% hatch rate). Though she was hatching runner ducks, and not chicken chicks... She has also said she forgot to turn the eggs for an odd day during the incubation and still got great results. It might be location affecting the best incubation method or something though, as she and I are in England.
When I've timed hens turning their eggs in my house nest box it's about every 20 minutes.Fun Factoid: Did You Know A Broody Hen Turns Her Eggs 69 Times A Day?
Crazy.
As ridgerunner stated, the difference may be minimal to home hatchers verses hatcheries, but I am here to do my BEST not my okay-est.![]()
What I don't know is how many in the clutch get turned at that time interval.