In this heat and humidity...

CityGirlintheCountry

Green Eggs and Hamlet
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...would it be possible for an egg to hatch without a hen on it? The temps have been in the mid to high 90s and humidity is really high. Could an egg left out in this possibly develop? At night it drops to about 80. Would that do it in?

I know my hens that are sitting have shoved all the eggs to the perimeter of their feathers and are often crouching over them instead of sitting on them. I assume it is because of the weather.

What do the incubation pros think?
 
If you are asking about an egg sitting in the nest box all by itself, no it will not develop and hatch. If you are asking about eggs that the broody moves to the outside and then pulls back under herself, yes they will incubate and hatch. I 'm not quite sure what your question was? The reason the broodies are crouching over the eggs rather than setting tight is related to the excessive ambient temps. They know what they are doing.
 
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Yes they will develop, Im not sure if they will actually hatch but they will develop, here in southern california we have temperatures in the 100's everyday and 80 to 90 at night.
I just went outside like 30 minutes ago and notice that my quail had kicked one of her eggs out of the nest, I crack it open and there was a little chick almost ready to hatch.
And you might also wanna check out this other thread https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/viewtopic.php?id=367943
 
Yeah, I know why the hens are doing it. It is blasted hot out there and you practically can swim through the air the humidity is so high. I was wondering if an egg left alone in a nest with no hen and no incubator would develop in this heat and humidity. It's not that much different from my incubator temps/humidity levels.

Just a random thought. Just wondered what the eggs left out would do...

edited to add- thanks for the link. That pretty much answers my question. Fascinating!
 
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Good question. I wouldn't think that it wouldn't make it all of the way through to hatching but it will certainly start to develop. I know that all of the hatching eggs that we had shipped this summer hatched what would seem to be about 3 days early. When we recieved the boxes from the mail carrier they were pretty warm as if they had been in a hot truck. I'm absolutly positive that they will definately begin to develop when exposed to those temps for a day or so. I think the cooling down at night to 80 degrees would be the problem. There is always the try and see scientific aproach though!
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Give it a try and let us know how it works out. Chickens never cease to amaze me and you just never know sometimes what kind of surprizes they will thow at ya.
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Well Im myself trying this out right now, I have a silkie egg and two RIR eggs outside in the nest they been there for 6 days now, and I just candle them last night and they seem to be right on track.
At 18 day I will probably take them and put them in the incubator if they actually make it all the way.
But them again the egg that I crack from my quail today was pretty well formed, and she doesnt sit on them at night, so its kind of weird.
 

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