Hi,
Someone wrote into Backyard Poultry Magazine for the April/May 2010 issue. They had posted a link on YouTube to a 7 part series on how to build an incubator. When I went to the link, it had been removed by the user, but in searching further, I found another 7 part series. It was fantastic! It covered the building of a redwood tabletop incubator, and even went so far as to describe how the maker determined the proper length of wire to make his own heating element. I believe the gentleman who made the incubator was Ed, his last name started with a B. When I went back a day later to double check some figures and dimensions, the poster had removed them.
Does anyone remember this 7 part tutorial, have access to the videos or know the person who made them? The videos were made in November of 2009, and the gentleman in them said he was going to sell the incubator on eBay sometime in early 2010. He thought it would be his last redwood incubator, as he was out of the old stock redwood he had been using.
Lets see if this collective brain can come up with this answer! Thanks for looking (and trying)!
Someone wrote into Backyard Poultry Magazine for the April/May 2010 issue. They had posted a link on YouTube to a 7 part series on how to build an incubator. When I went to the link, it had been removed by the user, but in searching further, I found another 7 part series. It was fantastic! It covered the building of a redwood tabletop incubator, and even went so far as to describe how the maker determined the proper length of wire to make his own heating element. I believe the gentleman who made the incubator was Ed, his last name started with a B. When I went back a day later to double check some figures and dimensions, the poster had removed them.
Does anyone remember this 7 part tutorial, have access to the videos or know the person who made them? The videos were made in November of 2009, and the gentleman in them said he was going to sell the incubator on eBay sometime in early 2010. He thought it would be his last redwood incubator, as he was out of the old stock redwood he had been using.
Lets see if this collective brain can come up with this answer! Thanks for looking (and trying)!
Last edited:
