KYBoi
In the Brooder
Hi all,
I am presently hatching my first batch of chicks in an incubator. Usually I let my hens do the work but for various reasons was unable to this time. I read a ton of posts on here discouraging intervention in the hatching process. I resisted the urge to help this chick and have unfortunately lost it. I apologize for the graphic picture but wanted to post my experience in case it helps someone else.
The humidity in the incubator has been a consistent 70% during the hatch. Today is Day 21 (10pm) and the first chick hatched at 5am. This little one in the first few photos below pipped around 7:00 am and began the process of zipping around the egg but then stopped. Thinking it was just resting I left it all day and moments ago discovered that it was no longer alive. It appears to be glued to the shell or perhaps is what people call shrink wrapped.
I took tweezers and chipped back the shell around the air cell to see what the issue was. This, of course, was after I’d already comfirmed it was not breathing or moving. I could see it’s little beak and it was firmly attached to the shell. I’m not sure how it became attached with such high humidity.
Now I have another that pipped earlier today and I’m concerned that it can’t get out either. I see it’s beak through the hole and it’s clearly still alive, but has made no progress or attempts at progress since the initial hole.
By the way, the reason those eggs are in the carton is because they were shipped and had detached and/or saddled air sacs.
I find it odd that the hatched chicks still look wet after being out since this morning, but thats probably due to the high humidity. I’m just reluctant to reduce it given the issue with the one that died.
I am presently hatching my first batch of chicks in an incubator. Usually I let my hens do the work but for various reasons was unable to this time. I read a ton of posts on here discouraging intervention in the hatching process. I resisted the urge to help this chick and have unfortunately lost it. I apologize for the graphic picture but wanted to post my experience in case it helps someone else.
The humidity in the incubator has been a consistent 70% during the hatch. Today is Day 21 (10pm) and the first chick hatched at 5am. This little one in the first few photos below pipped around 7:00 am and began the process of zipping around the egg but then stopped. Thinking it was just resting I left it all day and moments ago discovered that it was no longer alive. It appears to be glued to the shell or perhaps is what people call shrink wrapped.
I took tweezers and chipped back the shell around the air cell to see what the issue was. This, of course, was after I’d already comfirmed it was not breathing or moving. I could see it’s little beak and it was firmly attached to the shell. I’m not sure how it became attached with such high humidity.
Now I have another that pipped earlier today and I’m concerned that it can’t get out either. I see it’s beak through the hole and it’s clearly still alive, but has made no progress or attempts at progress since the initial hole.
By the way, the reason those eggs are in the carton is because they were shipped and had detached and/or saddled air sacs.
I find it odd that the hatched chicks still look wet after being out since this morning, but thats probably due to the high humidity. I’m just reluctant to reduce it given the issue with the one that died.
Attachments
-
3474A116-3FF0-484C-ADD1-DFE382ECB3D8.jpeg310.5 KB · Views: 30
-
DD331251-87B1-4331-854F-A8213DC23D81.jpeg316.1 KB · Views: 24
-
4C229FC9-77FE-42F7-9A2F-A19612AFB373.jpeg294 KB · Views: 22
-
1F70D769-9356-4D9C-A5F9-2ED0D09353E4.jpeg381.1 KB · Views: 24
-
E39CC7B2-E29C-44A2-BB51-31943EDD3CC7.jpeg351.1 KB · Views: 25
-
FBAD0C65-3C14-40A2-94F4-4979C5CE1551.jpeg316.7 KB · Views: 24