shahtir101
Songster
- Jun 11, 2015
- 3,172
- 244
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TCS or your ag store should have them
let me get you what I buy, you can see the ingredient and see if they have another brand...


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TCS or your ag store should have them
let me get you what I buy, you can see the ingredient and see if they have another brand...
. So this is pretty much my first candling experience as well. 1 egg has a bubble that moves wherever you roll it. Majority have the weird "saddle" looking air sac that moves but stays at the correct end at least. 2 have what I assume are normal air sacs. They stay mostly in place at the rounded end.not sure what up with the comb, listen to his chest sweets.... do you have any antibiotics to give to him, a sulfa? just to be safe?
yes variables but when you get them down you dont even think about them anymore! you will not want to set them horizontal with wacky air cells. How did they candle? alot of rolling air cells and wacky loose wiggly air cells?
The one that moves around with the egg is a rolling air cell. The "wonky" shaped ones are saddled. Glad to here you have some normal ones though.. So this is pretty much my first candling experience as well. 1 egg has a bubble that moves wherever you roll it. Majority have the weird "saddle" looking air sac that moves but stays at the correct end at least. 2 have what I assume are normal air sacs. They stay mostly in place at the rounded end.
Most likely. Heard something about Braddock (I think) using it as a reference point when he surveyed the area. The main trunk is about 6' through!it must have been there for the revolutionary war also whites!
Quote: I keep a sulfa product from jeffferslivestock.com
called SMZ-Med 454 this on hand
Soluble powder containing 100% sodium sulfamethazine per packet.
Add 2 Tbsp to each gallon of drinking water of chickens for the control and treatment of infectious coryza, coccidiosis, acute fowl cholera, and Pullorum disease and turkeys for coccidiosis.
Treats bacterial pneumonia, bacterial scours and E. Coli in swine.
Treats cattle for bacterial pneumonia (BRD), shipping fever, foot rot, calf diphtheria, and acute mastitis.
http://www.jefferspet.com/products/...84af9fa2600f00000499/533884af9fa2600f0000049c
How to Provide Emergency and Supportive Care - Updated 1-3-2016
https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/...mergency-and-supportive-care-updated-1-3-2016
Is there any chance they could still hatch?The one that moves around with the egg is a rolling air cell. The "wonky" shaped ones are saddled. Glad to here you have some normal ones though.
Good looking Lab!
if I would have gone outside without pants I would have froze historical woodTrue
I was Joshin ya tho![]()
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x2 yeezus whites!
Quote: the two that have normal air cells you can tilt after a day gently side to side
BELOW ROLLING AIR CELL OF A SHIPPED EGG
Rolls like a Carpenters Level
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UNDERSTANDING what goes WRONG with SHIPPED EGGS
The yolk of an egg is held in place on each end by what is called Chalaza. These are delicate cords that keep the yolk centered in the egg. When you crack open an egg, you notice a white stringy thing on the yolk, this is the Chalaza. When eggs are shipped they encounter postal handlers that toss the packages, sorting machinery, bumpy vehicle rides, temperature changes and possibly X-ray Machines! So by the time the eggs get to you they are pretty much scrambled inside. So if you are going to buy eggs and have them shipped to you, be aware that the viability drops TREMENDOUSLY. There are rare instances when they ALL arrive safely but it is always a gamble.
See Egg anatomy here http://www.geauga4h.org/poultry/egg_parts.htm
BELOW is a short video of an Rolling Detatched Air Cell
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SHIPPED EGGS & Malpositions!
BELOW ARE "SADDLE" SHAPED AIR CELLS
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SADDLE SHAPED AIR CELLS are very COMMON with shipped eggs!Saddle shaped is when one or both sides have a large "dip" in the air cell. A lot of times with saddle shaped cells the chick doesn’t position correct for hatching and their feet can easily get stuck behind their head and “smoosh” the chick so they can’t move, it can also force the yolk sack and everything more north in the shell.... Keep a close eye on these eggs and its VERY important to pencil mark Air cells!
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some say they have hatched them, dont turn your eggs for three days just set upright in the bator and let them settle, the rolling ones you want to probably let longer without turning or tilting.... and I would keep ALL the eggs upright for the entire hatch just gently tilting them side to side in the egg carton with the bottoms cut out (not a paper one though) so they get circulation. again only tilt the heeled air cells after three days. its the only chance for them, you have to take the chance of healing them vs not turning when they are this bad. like I said silkie and polish are tough to travel![]()
18v most likelyYour cordless power drill???![]()