Humidity question

Yes, sorry- I should have said that- the hole is in case they haven’t dried out enough in time. I haven’t had any drown, I have helped 3 shrink wrapped with a success rate of 1of 3 (2 died within a day). I personally will help to the best of my ability, (which isn’t all that, but…) and if they still die, I’m sad, but I figure they would have died anyway if I hadn’t tried. Also, someone on here mentioned after you decide any unhatched ones are “done” and you are turning off the incubator, it’s a smart idea to put the unhatched into ziplocks, and if you have the stomach for it, go ahead and crack them and see what’s inside. They are dead, it’s been several days beyond hatch date, the rest have hatched, no signs of life when candling. But you can learn from seeing what was going on and give you a better chance next time. And having them in bags (duh- great idea) makes it a lot less yucky.
 
Using the dry hatch method I set 14 eggs on the 28th of Feb.and 9 hatched.I removed an infertile egg on the 10th after candling them. (another one was 'questionable' but I saw no blood ring so I left it)
5 brown eggs and 4 white hatched.I only have 4 white eggs that didn't hatch and one of those was 'questionable'. Adding water on day 18-21 might have saved the others.I lowered the temp to 98.5 the last 4 days(all of them are legbar X welsummer or brown leghorn crosses)
 

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I don’t never add any, I have great hatches and lively chicks.
I wouldn’t even attempt to change by adding water when the dry hatch method works so good, plus clean up is a lot easier without any bad smells whatsoever.
You don't even add any at lockdown?
 

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