Days 25 & 28 are pretty late. Perhaps low temp? Maybe your thermometer isn’t reading true. All of mine hatch day 20-21 the only time I’ve had them hatch early was with a broody and they all hatched day 17-18
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He’s a handsome fellow!
Do you have a incubator homemade or an actual bator??? With both i have late hatches as does my friend and we have to assist them with pinsize hole where air cell is. Something isnt right!Days 25 & 28 are pretty late. Perhaps low temp? Maybe your thermometer isn’t reading true. All of mine hatch day 20-21 the only time I’ve had them hatch early was with a broody and they all hatched day 17-18
He fertilizes eggs there was a baby in the egg i checked i think his short leg trait is maybe passing on making the baby chick not proportioned right in size to kick or move to hatch out? Theres bullseye in all my yolk, too. It took him a few months but he hits the target i think his unfortunate genes are affecting my standard eggs!!!If you are having late hatches, your bator temp is off. Have you calibrated your thermometers to 100* using a good medical grade thermometer? And have you calibrated your hygrometer? Are you tracking your air cell sizes?
More often, banties hatch early rather than late.
As for home made vs: "actual bator"... don't put down those home made bators! A good home made bator, in the hands of a skilled handler will produce an excellent hatch! My hatch rates usually are better than hatch rates in huge bators in mega hatcheries. This, comparing my two home made bators to purchased or commerical ones!
You should not have to be making pin holes either. I'm not telling you NOT TO do this, just saying that if your bator equipment is calibrated, you have accurately assessed air cell size, and if your eggs are coming from quality breeders, you should not need to routinely intervene. I will assist on an as needed basis, but those assists are abnormal, and not at all par for the course.
IMO, Your banty is the problem. His legs are not long enough for him to hit the target with a LF hen!
I'm doing research on calibrating i have a happy farm renote sensor hygrometer inside my incubator and i know homemade bators are good my friend hatches more out of her styrofoam homemade bator. Ok all this calibrating stuff i am researching i just have a happy farm hydrometer that displays temp & humidity inside my 7egg incubator. i will continue reading on calibrating its all new to me this calibrating thing. but no i dont have a good ThermometerIf you are having late hatches, your bator temp is off. Have you calibrated your thermometers to 100* using a good medical grade thermometer? And have you calibrated your hygrometer? Are you tracking your air cell sizes?
More often, banties hatch early rather than late.
As for home made vs: "actual bator"... don't put down those home made bators! A good home made bator, in the hands of a skilled handler will produce an excellent hatch! My hatch rates usually are better than hatch rates in huge bators in mega hatcheries. This, comparing my two home made bators to purchased or commerical ones!
You should not have to be making pin holes either. I'm not telling you NOT TO do this, just saying that if your bator equipment is calibrated, you have accurately assessed air cell size, and if your eggs are coming from qualithermometers ers, you should not need to routinely intervene. I will assist on an as needed basis, but those assists are abnormal, and not at all par for the course.
IMO, Your banty is the problem. His legs are not long enough for him to hit the target with a LF hen!