- Mar 5, 2013
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Hi, I am the original poster of this thread: fowlweatherfriends. I changed emails and forgot my password and so was not able to log on again with my original ID.
I am so thrilled that this thread has helped so many little chicken lives! I went back and read all 18 pages of posts, and it seems that the information has been beneficial to many of you, and for that I am grateful!
I took a break from farm life as I got married and moved to my husbands home, and sadly no chickens were allowed. We recently bought a nice home with acreage and built a barn. I have restarted my chicken flock and we expanded to peafowl, guineas, and Nigerian Dwarf goats which we hope to breed in the future.
Recently we hatched several batches of chicks to boost my flock and had a batch that needed help-the ENTIRE batch needed help zipping, and I even pipped one myself and it lives. It boiled down to the humidity issue and an inferior incubator. The styrofoam types just simply do not regulate temp, air exchange, or humidity AS WELL AS more expensive brands. I switched to a Brinsea Eco20 and it is spot on! My suggestion to those having hatch issues is to invest a little more in a higher quality incubator if you are planning on raising chickens-it will help the hatch issues tremendously.
There have been many chicks that I have helped with zipping, many that I have hatched completely in my hand, and with the last batch, several of my kids helped using the knowledge they gained from watching me previously. I discovered that not only was my incubator not stable, but my hygrometer was waaay off.
In a perfect world, every incubator would regulate temp and humidity perfectly etc. but we are in a flawed world with varying external conditions as well as incubator issues. I am so happy to read that my advice is being used with careful thought and that there are chicken babies happily alive today because of it
.
When I have time, I may be able to upload several pictures of the step by step process to help visually.
I am so thrilled that this thread has helped so many little chicken lives! I went back and read all 18 pages of posts, and it seems that the information has been beneficial to many of you, and for that I am grateful!
I took a break from farm life as I got married and moved to my husbands home, and sadly no chickens were allowed. We recently bought a nice home with acreage and built a barn. I have restarted my chicken flock and we expanded to peafowl, guineas, and Nigerian Dwarf goats which we hope to breed in the future.
Recently we hatched several batches of chicks to boost my flock and had a batch that needed help-the ENTIRE batch needed help zipping, and I even pipped one myself and it lives. It boiled down to the humidity issue and an inferior incubator. The styrofoam types just simply do not regulate temp, air exchange, or humidity AS WELL AS more expensive brands. I switched to a Brinsea Eco20 and it is spot on! My suggestion to those having hatch issues is to invest a little more in a higher quality incubator if you are planning on raising chickens-it will help the hatch issues tremendously.
There have been many chicks that I have helped with zipping, many that I have hatched completely in my hand, and with the last batch, several of my kids helped using the knowledge they gained from watching me previously. I discovered that not only was my incubator not stable, but my hygrometer was waaay off.
In a perfect world, every incubator would regulate temp and humidity perfectly etc. but we are in a flawed world with varying external conditions as well as incubator issues. I am so happy to read that my advice is being used with careful thought and that there are chicken babies happily alive today because of it

When I have time, I may be able to upload several pictures of the step by step process to help visually.
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