I have not yet bought an incubator. I am reading and shopping and discovered a question I have not found the answer.
If I buy an incubator with hatching tray in the unit, how do I increase the humidity for the last four days while keeping the humidity low for the incubating trays? example is the Dickey 3 by 1
http://dickeyincubators.com/products.htm
I want to have three sets of eggs, putting a new set in each week to keep the eggs fresh(less than 10 days old).
I have an awesome Robert Bradley redwood incubator from the gosh, probably 40s or 50s. All spring I had great hatches (even 100% on some of my duck hatches) There are two regular trays and the bottom tray has been modified with hatching baskets. I put this weeks eggs in the top tray, then each week as I candled I moved them to the next tray down. The night of day 18 or morning of day 19 I moved the eggs due to hatch to the bottom tray. My humidity ran 25-30% until this point. As soon as I heard cheeping or saw pipping I would raise humidity to about 65% until hatch was done, then get rid of the water and let it drop back down to 30 or less. Once I fill the water reservoirs with like 36 cellulose sponges in then it only takes about 10 min to get the humidity up.you dont. that incubator is designed for large single run hatches.
how many eggs are you planing to hatch at a time?
I would probably not try this in a regular styrobator unless I had two of them; one to incubate and one to hatch in because they all have their the water trays on the bottom, under the egg tray, so too much fiddling around with them.