How to not hatch turkey eggs

Harp Turkey Ranch

Songster
11 Years
Dec 18, 2008
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McCleary, WA
I was reading a blog a guy told me about that he does so I was reading and read this strange entry, thought I would share it with every one on how to not hatch turkey eggs.

Check out how he puts his eggs in the trays most are pointy end up or they arer laying on their sides...

I have talked with him on this a few times and he says that this is how he does it and it works great for him ???


Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Turkey hatch milestone

Set the first whole tray of turkeys to hatch today. I usually get a 90% hatch rate, which means I'll probably get 30 turkeys poults out of this batch.
If you click on the picture for a bigger version, you'll see a date that's on each egg. This date is the date that the egg should be moved from the rotation area of the incubator into the hatching portion. Rotating the eggs a little each hour makes sure that the chick or poult doesn't stick to the inside of the egg. Removing the egg from rotation means that the chick can orient itself and peck a hole in the top of the egg.
The settings we use are 100.5 degrees F, 68% humidity for all eggs - chicken and turkey and bantam. Chickens get 18 days of rotation and hatch on day 21. Turkeys get 20 days of rotation and hatch on day 23.
To make life easier I set hatches in batches the size of a tray. So I'll collect eggs until I've got 36, and then set a whole tray at once. Fertile eggs will actually keep pretty well at room temperatures; I've held them as long as 10 days and still gotten good hatches. But optimally you're setting them the same day you're collecting them, but I just don't have that many right now.
After the majority of the eggs have hatched we look at the ones that didn't -- sometimes the chick is stuck to the egg and a little careful work with some warm water to soak off the shell will save the chick. Other chicks just get close, but don't actually hatch.
If your humidity isn't high enough you'll dry the eggs out and the chicks cannot escape the egg. So watch for a hatch where you get a little beak hole but the chick doesn't get any farther. That's a sign of low humidity.

This is the full hatch I set today. One batch of chicken eggs, one of turkey, and one mixed tray.

2nm0ynp.jpg


Just a note: If you buy heritage breed poults from a hatchery they're $9 each, which is valuing a dozen turkey eggs at around $90, figuring some incubation loss. So one way to figure it is that the tray of turkey eggs I set there are worth $270, and an incubator full of turkeys is worth $1620!
 
Turkeys get 20 days of rotation and hatch on day 23

This was my comment, it has to be a type-O, unless he keeps his heat up to 103-106 and that I'd think would be dangerous, the death of the embryo/bird due to excessive heat. It would also allow the eggs to develop quicker. Hmmm
I know the last time I hatched eggs in my old Hovabator I had hatchlings on day 19 up to the outer ring being soft.

This article is one that makes you scratch your chin and say Hmmm.​
 
Spook, i think at those temps your lucky if they last hours 103-106
sickbyc.gif
.. they will surly start to cook... early hatch is normally when the temp is to high by a single degree or a bit less over desired incubation temps.

Charlie
 
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