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january hatch-a-long

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My incubator arrived and I'll be hooking it up shortly to start running it and testing it.

With the eggs I collected yesterday, I will have 55 Flowery Hens, Bielefelders & Australorps (Blue variety). I will continue to collect for a few days - would like to incubate 36 to 40 eggs...

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Hmm, by the time they are set in incubator, will be part of the February hatch-a- long. Iwasn't going to keep any of the mixed breeds but, may have changed my mind...
 
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I have a question for those of you collecting eggs and incubating now. My husband asked me, and I had a very general answer. Then when I looked for a specific one in the books and online references, I really couldn't find an answer.

So, what temps do you safely collect eggs for incubating at? This past week has been COLD - last night it was 33*f when I collected my 13 eggs. The other evening it was 30* and one night it was 54*...

I'm only collecting at night on Monday - Thursday. Normally leave for work @ 6:30a & off between 5 - 6p - so home between 5:30-8 - depending on errands. Feeding & collecting chores when I get home. On Friday, Saturday and Sundays, sometimes I make a run thru the coops about mid-morning and then again in the evening as the girls are getting up on the roosts.

This Sunday the temp is supposed to bottom out officially around 18* (we usually run colder) and not expected to get very warm on Monday (maybe 38*) at all. Use those eggs only for eating? Of course, if my new and only one incubator is already full, it's a moot point. I can see that i will need to get another incubator already and I haven't even done my first hatch yet!!:ya

I know that all of our pullets are laying fertile eggs with the roo's they are in with - I have checked many (I put 4 dozen eggs in the freezer the other night - pre-scrambled and 6 to a freezer bag). 2 dated Christmas day (I thought we had used all of those already, dates seemed to have gotten mixed up) - had actually started developing while on our kitchen counter :sick - my pitX girl LOVED me that night! Thank goodness was sans the "rotten egg" scent or I'd have been done for a while... :th

Edited to add - And how long do you let your eggs "rest" after they are collected and before they go into the incubator?
 
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I have a question for those of you collecting eggs and incubating now. My husband asked me, and I had a very general answer. Then when I looked for a specific one in the books and online references, I really couldn't find an answer.

So, what temps do you safely collect eggs for incubating at? This past week has been COLD - last night it was 33*f when I collected my 13 eggs. The other evening it was 30* and one night it was 54*...

I'm only collecting at night on Monday - Thursday. Normally leave for work @ 6:30a & off between 5 - 6p - so home between 5:30-8 - depending on errands. Feeding & collecting chores when I get home. On Friday, Saturday and Sundays, sometimes I make a run thru the coops about mid-morning and then again in the evening as the girls are getting up on the roosts.

This Sunday the temp is supposed to bottom out officially around 18* (we usually run colder) and not expected to get very warm on Monday (maybe 38*) at all. Use those eggs only for eating? Of course, if my new and only one incubator is already full, it's a moot point. I can see that i will need to get another incubator already and I haven't even done my first hatch yet!!:ya

I know that all of our pullets are laying fertile eggs with the roo's they are in with - I have checked many (I put 4 dozen eggs in the freezer the other night - pre-scrambled and 6 to a freezer bag). 2 dated Christmas day (I thought we had used all of those already, dates seemed to have gotten mixed up) - had actually started developing while on our kitchen counter :sick - my pitX girl LOVED me that night! Thank goodness was sans the "rotten egg" scent or I'd have been done for a while... :th

Where I am at it doesn't get as cold as where you are at, and I collect mine during the daytime as I'm retired. I probably wouldn't keep any egg's for hatching if the temps were below 40* in the daytime where you are at, or unless the egg was still warm from the hen just getting off of it. 32* is the freezing point.
 
One of my baby quail hatched with curled toes goes is there any way to fix it's toes.
i found it very difficult to do chick chair or hobbles....I bought some painters tape to try and make booties but 1 straightened on its own and the other is getting around fine now and has straightened a lot, so I personally would watch for a few days (with a little extra help eating/drinking if necessary) before booties
 
I have a question for those of you collecting eggs and incubating now. My husband asked me, and I had a very general answer. Then when I looked for a specific one in the books and online references, I really couldn't find an answer.

So, what temps do you safely collect eggs for incubating at? This past week has been COLD - last night it was 33*f when I collected my 13 eggs. The other evening it was 30* and one night it was 54*...

I'm only collecting at night on Monday - Thursday. Normally leave for work @ 6:30a & off between 5 - 6p - so home between 5:30-8 - depending on errands. Feeding & collecting chores when I get home. On Friday, Saturday and Sundays, sometimes I make a run thru the coops about mid-morning and then again in the evening as the girls are getting up on the roosts.

This Sunday the temp is supposed to bottom out officially around 18* (we usually run colder) and not expected to get very warm on Monday (maybe 38*) at all. Use those eggs only for eating? Of course, if my new and only one incubator is already full, it's a moot point. I can see that i will need to get another incubator already and I haven't even done my first hatch yet!!:ya

I know that all of our pullets are laying fertile eggs with the roo's they are in with - I have checked many (I put 4 dozen eggs in the freezer the other night - pre-scrambled and 6 to a freezer bag). 2 dated Christmas day (I thought we had used all of those already, dates seemed to have gotten mixed up) - had actually started developing while on our kitchen counter :sick - my pitX girl LOVED me that night! Thank goodness was sans the "rotten egg" scent or I'd have been done for a while... :th

Edited to add - And how long do you let your eggs "rest" after they are collected and before they go into the incubator?

If I collect it before it freezes, I'll incubate it :D People successfully incubate refrigerated eggs, so that's just above freezing, right?

I have 14 duck eggs in now that were outside for over a week (up and down temps), I thought the girls were going to sit on them, but then it looked like they weren't, so I took most of the eggs and popped them in the incubator. I'm not sure what's growing yet, but always worth a shot.

And remember, it takes a couple hours for an egg to go from their body temp to freezing, even if out in the open, I think. If its in a nest box, or enclosure, it will stay warm for a little while. Even better if there is a lot of bedding/shavings etc.

I'm not saying this is ideal, but if they can't be collected any sooner, we have to deal with what Mother Nature hands us. :D
 

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