INDIANA BYC'ers HERE!

Good trouble-shooting ideas & awesome incubator.
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the top is going to be the brooder and the bottom is the incubator....both units will have digital thermostats...the bottom unit will have temp and humidity control just like the expensive units...so well see how this goes as this is just a whim project to see if i can build my own cabinet incubator...and then if it works i have a second fridge to work on.....until tomorrow...night everyone
 
Those are QT jars!! Wow that's a big incubator! I thought they were baby food jars - which don't always seal well when reused. You'll have to take a pic of the giant eggs next to a ruler It's a tough call you'll have to make There's a possible risk with the odor but the chance of success goes down as the eggs age. I've only hatched chickens. To bad you can't slip them under her:
I was afraid of that too and then didn't feel so frantically rushed to perfect everything right away as I was researching and read Emu eggs are viable for a good 45 days!! Maybe 92 but that was my mind BLOWN!
 
If anyone is interested, I called Orscheln (in Greenfield and Shelbyville) and Rural King (in Shelbyville) today. I may have mixed up which ones are which hatchery, but I bleive it was Orsheln is coming from Estes Hatchery in MO http://www.esteshatchery.com/ and Rural King is Townline Hatchery in MI http://townlinehatchery.com/

I called TS here by my in Indy yesterday and they don't know yet. I swore I wasn't going to get any hatchery this year but we really want Easter Eggers and I want them sexed. Agrian is where I got my birds last year and they use Meyer Hatchery in OH https://www.meyerhatchery.com/. Since I am happy with their birds that may be the route I go. Agrarian tends to be a little higher in prince than RK or TC so I'd be excited if TC uses them!

I had one flock from Mt Healthy, they are 2 years old now (my BA girls). I won't buy there again due to the repeated salmonella issues they have, but I can say the girls I got from them as chicks were very healthy, thriving and all lived to adulthood.
Can the vents be removed and reattached, we have to do it here too. We get them in our buildings on occasion. I net em with a big minnow net and out they go. I have used a coffee can and a piece or cardboard too if they are hanging! Nasty lil buggers, will show their teeth in a heartbeat! I really value them for the insect control, but be aware they are a moderate rabies risk for our state. Last i knew they are protected.

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I would love to get a pic of a silkie brooding an emu egg
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I'm still going back and forth to Louisville while my sister recovers from surgery. While snowed-in there, I worried about my hens. My DH works hard to take care of them while I'm away. Before I got home yesterday, he noticed that my Splash Silkie, Ditzy, had been pecked in the back of the head. The same thing happened to my other Silkie, Smalty, two months ago --only she was pecked in the front of the head-- by my two gigantic Orpingtons who didn't want her snuggling up next to them on the perch. So I am guessing that Ditzy was cold and wanted to snuggle up next to the big, fluffy Orps. Unfortunately, the Silkies don't like to snuggle with each other. Because of Ditzy's injury and the frigid temps, I am housing the two Silkies in a spare bedroom. It's too cold for two Silkies with bald heads! I put a tiny bit of Rooster Booster Pick No More on Ditzy's head, so the photo of her wound looks even worse. It's too bad that their feathers won't grow back until their first molt.






This is how they looked at 6 months. So healthy and fluffy. I hope that @bradselig (who gave me the babies a year ago this month) doesn't report me to the authorities! The problem with Silkies is that they don't realize that they are Silkies. They think they're just like the Big Barnyard Girls!
 
kittydoc ~ Flock Art! I can relate. I also think it applies to cats. I've always thought of cats as art objects.
Btw, re bananas-- My chickens like them, but hate having ripe banana goo on their beaks! Same goes with yogurt.

Originally Posted by pipdzipdnreadytogo

I love these girls. I haven't yet found anything about them that I dislike (well, except the two of the keep wanting to nest in the feed shed, but that's more a chicken thing than a Dorking thing, I think!
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). I love that they are so friendly and cuddly and sweet. They love lap time and neither will shy away from being held. They just let you walk over and scoop them up!
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They are very calm and easygoing, not spooked easily like my Leghorns and my Ancona. Hands down my favorite breed that I've owned.
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@pipdzipdnreadytogo Did you hatch your Dorkings or purchase them? Just wondering about their friendly nature-- if they're super friendly because they were hatched. If you purchased them, were they raised with others? I've found that friendly breeds can be affected by being raised with skittish breeds.
The picture of your Splash Marans, Frou-Frou, reminds me of my Splash English Orpington, Eliza. Big splashy girls!
Here's a video that shows Eliza and some of my other chicken taking a dust bath.
Chickens Dust Bathing on a Sunny February Day It would look so much better in high def, but youtube has been rejecting them even if they're short. @Faraday40 might like to see Bonbon who stand up to show off at the end.
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The video was taken last Saturday when it was almost 60 degrees! It's going to be -7 tonight, which is better than -14 that they had predicted. My coops are heated 15-20 degrees higher than the outdoor temp. For Christmas, my DS gave me a Wireless Indoor/Outdoor 8-Channel Thermo-Hygrometer with Three Remote Sensors. That way, I can monitor the temp and humidity of each coop from inside the house. My DH and I check the readings about every five minutes! hahaha

 
I'm still going back and forth to Louisville while my sister recovers from surgery. While snowed-in there, I worried about my hens. My DH works hard to take care of them while I'm away. Before I got home yesterday, he noticed that my Splash Silkie, Ditzy, had been pecked in the back of the head. The same thing happened to my other Silkie, Smalty, two months ago --only she was pecked in the front of the head-- by my two gigantic Orpingtons who didn't want her snuggling up next to them on the perch. So I am guessing that Ditzy was cold and wanted to snuggle up next to the big, fluffy Orps. Unfortunately, the Silkies don't like to snuggle with each other. Because of Ditzy's injury and the frigid temps, I am housing the two Silkies in a spare bedroom. It's too cold for two Silkies with bald heads! I put a tiny bit of Rooster Booster Pick No More on Ditzy's head, so the photo of her wound looks even worse. It's too bad that their feathers won't grow back until their first molt.






This is how they looked at 6 months. So healthy and fluffy. I hope that @bradselig (who gave me the babies a year ago this month) doesn't report me to the authorities! The problem with Silkies is that they don't realize that they are Silkies. They think they're just like the Big Barnyard Girls!
Its more common to see this is the crested breeds, my white silkie hen had an issue with some of the other birds, as did my GL polish hen. Its worse with the silkies if they have a vaulted skull too, puts them at great risk. I started to trim crests and it seem to help. Not as attractive tho.
 
I have put off setting my Emu eggs because of my incubator construction.
Well it's complete but I'm in desperate need of someone providing any feedback or advice!! Please! My goal is to have them set by Friday morning the absolute latest!

Pics provided. I know @birdman55 has built one or several. Not sure who else.

1st and most important at this time is the smell! I have checked over and over that it isn't something melting and it was there the moment I turned the lights and fans on. It surprises me how strong the smell is and makes me concerned that it will cause issues with the development of the embryos.

I know plenty of these coolerbators hatch chick's. Is it the cooler I got or is it truly Normal.




Temps are stable.

In the meantime I candle the shipped eggs. They are day 14 tomorrow and of the 15 NN shipped I have 12 alive and well. I do have 3 of those with funky air cells. They dip pretty far down on one side. I am going to turn the turner off at day 16 and hatch upright which I've never done before. 2 of the 8 set silkie eggs are still alive too which were pullet eggs.

Now one of those girls decided to sit so I stuck about 8 more silkie eggs under her!
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Lol!
I've hatched all my eggs upright and have very good hatch rates. I use egg cartons with holes cut in the bottom of each cup for air circulation. One bonus is that when one chick hatches, it doesn't roll all the other eggs around as it lurches around the incubator. The chicks like to sleep in the empty cups too.

I'm still going back and forth to Louisville while my sister recovers from surgery. While snowed-in there, I worried about my hens. My DH works hard to take care of them while I'm away. Before I got home yesterday, he noticed that my Splash Silkie, Ditzy, had been pecked in the back of the head. The same thing happened to my other Silkie, Smalty, two months ago --only she was pecked in the front of the head-- by my two gigantic Orpingtons who didn't want her snuggling up next to them on the perch. So I am guessing that Ditzy was cold and wanted to snuggle up next to the big, fluffy Orps. Unfortunately, the Silkies don't like to snuggle with each other. Because of Ditzy's injury and the frigid temps, I am housing the two Silkies in a spare bedroom. It's too cold for two Silkies with bald heads! I put a tiny bit of Rooster Booster Pick No More on Ditzy's head, so the photo of her wound looks even worse. It's too bad that their feathers won't grow back until their first molt.






This is how they looked at 6 months. So healthy and fluffy. I hope that @bradselig (who gave me the babies a year ago this month) doesn't report me to the authorities! The problem with Silkies is that they don't realize that they are Silkies. They think they're just like the Big Barnyard Girls!
I had major problems with polish. The other chickens loved to de-crest them. I ended up re-homing them to places where they could avoid that. I hope your silkies heal up quickly.
 

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