INCUBATING w/FRIENDS! w/Sally Sunshine Shipped Eggs No problem!

Status
Not open for further replies.
Not at all; the rule is "Without pics it didn't happen"  :p

Oh!! That's easy I thought maybe I was offending some one. No butchering planned unless the Orpington's don't start laying. They have been moved to greenhouse for now
400
 
LL

YES FERTILE!!
LL









Clear eggs at candle may contain both truly infertile or
they may contain (fertile) embryos that died early.

http://anrcatalog.ucanr.edu/pdf/8134.pdf


Fertility in hatching eggs Click here



FACTS AND MYTHS FERTILE EGGS
http://www.the-chicken-chick.com/2013/01/facts-and-myths-about-fertile-eggs.html
Embryonic Development, Day by Day images
http://www.thepoultrysite.com/articles/1459/embryonic-development-day-by-day/

Originally Posted by campingshaws

FERTILES

FERTILES below!​
The next two are fertile eggs at slightly different stages, but both freshly laid. Usually, you look for the bulls eye/donut appearance, but there are different stages of development of even freshly laid eggs and the two last pictures demonstrate that. This is caused by cells in the center of the blastoderm dying off and leaving a cleared out area, making that bullseye appearance.
FertileEggPIx.jpg

FertileEggPic.jpg







slide_31.jpg


Can roosters be infertile?
Hatching egg fertility (the number of fertile eggs produced by a flock) is affected by a number of factors - some affect female fertility and others affect male fertility. You can actually 'milk' a rooster to collect semen and examine it under a microscope to see if it contains active sperm. Other factors include the type of lighting program and the ratio of males to females. Roosters, as with hens, are long day breeders in that they breed when days are long (more than 12 hours). The optimum ratio of male to females depends are the breed but are typically 1 rooster for every 6-8 females. If there are too many roosters they fight rather than breed the hens.




Avian Female Reproductive System
http://www2.ca.uky.edu/agc/pubs/ASC/ASC201/ASC201.pdf



infertile eggs
Here is a pea egg after being in the incubator for 7 days.







EARLY INCUBATION QUITTERS
It looked good enough to eat. This is what I thought early quitters looked like:










Fertility:

  • IS IT FERTILE? Many images see post #43324
  • Managing Fertility click HERE
  • Several Reasons Why Your Hens May Stop Laying Eggs click HERE
  • Winter Blues w/the Roos, why are my eggs infertile ugh starting post #1986
  • Reproductive Physiology of the Hen post #40628
  • HOW long does a ROO SPERM REMAIN IN HEN post #40628
  • Polyspermy is typical in birds. Several sperm enter the germinal disc region post #40644
  • Example 57 out of 126 were declared fertile.
    uoyInP2kathSd0bodBWR8nXhWUP2nsvWKkb1ZHOfBUlz-hCatLz-bNM1NOu3LXU4oIeA6U78tL9biuhY3swNxvlQqK-I2Z9-OqSIN7n7gSVKl8Ito5ctrs54DMAo7qf9_uGr6PXp
  • Hatch Rates
  • VvEEz1FHbq4u7uIhdMnqpL0HW0MKNrRZyx22yPYIWeNunJ8zrBPjmLfP0mhaALG9UWC-cYi4gTvbalCR1Hu-DF0clg7UoDPiL6ThuhFf4POMC-qHxYgs68Eu40JSnODWvNFBRuhN
    Example 50 of the 57 fertile eggs hatched the % hatch=
    9cduBsLBtlMmy59hCt1eaOLZZWj6pLTqZsWLpyeOPT5uEs581TBaQoq1zGSkk3tlMjvofdH53l5WKFpYUnIcSaAkNpDLUEo_2p3IologA2TcqJ5q_6YtuAZinmZMEqKWV-zzzNwo
 
Last edited:
This is my dream incubator for the future
droolin.gif

I was just wondering do the egg trays come with dividers? Can you not fit as many in with the dividers?

Good luck with your incubation
fl.gif

Yes, it comes with lots of dividers, and unlike the smaller Brinsea's, the dividers are simple thick solid plastic (thin enough to bend reasonably easy). However, when you use them I typically end up with about 1/2 of an egg space at the end of each row, limiting me to 42 in a tray. As long as their isn't a lot of space between the eggs, there's no clicking or chipping when the turner turns. If anything, I kinda think this is more like it would be under a broody...;-]
 
Yes, it comes with lots of dividers, and unlike the smaller Brinsea's, the dividers are simple thick solid plastic (thin enough to bend reasonably easy). However, when you use them I typically end up with about 1/2 of an egg space at the end of each row, limiting me to 42 in a tray. As long as their isn't a lot of space between the eggs, there's no clicking or chipping when the turner turns. If anything, I kinda think this is more like it would be under a broody...;-]


Thanks so much, that's good to know for the future :highfive:
 
I've started the growout pen build. Not going as fast as I'd like for it to be, but I am making a little progress.

4 - 4"x4"x10' treated posts form the foundation of roughly 100 square feet.



2"x4" treated lumber (ripped in half) create the wall frames. It's lightweight so it'll need additional diagonal bracing. Front wall is 6' 3" and back wall is 4' 6", which provides more than adequate slope.



That's it so far, but my goal is to at least get the roof on it before the day's up...
 
I've started the growout pen build. Not going as fast as I'd like for it to be, but I am making a little progress.

4 - 4"x4"x10' treated posts form the foundation of roughly 100 square feet.



2"x4" treated lumber (ripped in half) create the wall frames. It's lightweight so it'll need additional diagonal bracing. Front wall is 6' 3" and back wall is 4' 6", which provides more than adequate slope.



That's it so far, but my goal is to at least get the roof on it before the day's up...

thumbsup.gif


I bet the beer is tasting mighty fine as you wait for responses...;-]
 
I've started the growout pen build. Not going as fast as I'd like for it to be, but I am making a little progress.

4 - 4"x4"x10' treated posts form the foundation of roughly 100 square feet.



2"x4" treated lumber (ripped in half) create the wall frames. It's lightweight so it'll need additional diagonal bracing. Front wall is 6' 3" and back wall is 4' 6", which provides more than adequate slope.



That's it so far, but my goal is to at least get the roof on it before the day's up...
Carry on. chop chop
 
Last edited:
Status
Not open for further replies.

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom