To assist or not is a personal decision. Many of us have very healthy birds resulting from an assisted hatch.
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Quick question. Hubby does NOT like the chicks and is begging me to put the brooder in the garage. He says they're poop and stuff could be bad for our daughter with her sickness. Temps aren't bad here right now. Pretty much fifties and mid forties at night. The garage has a heater but it's just a little one and probably will keep the garage about sixty with the heat cranked. Will they be okay in there with their heat lamp? It's a 250 watt red bulb. Here's a pic of their brooder with the lid and heat lamp taken off.![]()
To assist or not is a personal decision. Many of us have very healthy birds resulting from an assisted hatch.
I have to ask; "Many of us have very health birds resulting from an assisted hatch" is based on what survey you took? I can appreciate you saying you have had healthy birds resulting from assisted hatches, but you are almost making it sound like assisting is a really good thing...and it isn't.
Like I said. Personal decision. And there are members here who do have success and healthy, productive birds after assisting.
"There are members here who have assisted" isn't "many of us"...
But can I ask, have you ever checked whether those assisted chicks laid eggs that resulted in assisted hatches? I don't want to state "survival of the fittest" too strongly, but with something who gestates in 21 days, survival of the fittest does kinda make sense, don't you think? There aren't a lot of traits that breeders care about that matter more than; "Can it hatch?"...
Quote: I have found that the majority of my chicks and ducklings that need assisting are the ones I incubate. Those that I don't sell have very few problems hatching their own.
Quote: I also assist and have noticed that the ones I have to assist are the ones I incubate, not the ones the hens and ducks incubate. Obviously my incubation skills need improvement,![]()
-Kathy
I have found that the majority of my chicks and ducklings that need assisting are the ones I incubate. Those that I don't sell have very few problems hatching their own.
I also assist and have noticed that the ones I have to assist are the ones I incubate, not the ones the hens and ducks incubate. Obviously my incubation skills need improvement,![]()
-Kathy
Quote: My skills with my incubators need improvement, that's no secret. If I had enough broodies around I wouldn't even try using the incubators, but I don't. Most of my broody chickens are small, so they can't cover more that 4-5 pea eggs, and my Muscovy Ducks make nests in really bad places. Those pea eggs that I stick under hens hatch in 26-27 days, and most don't need assisting. 98% won't need assisting.
-Kathy
My skills with my incubators need improvement, that's no secret. If I had enough broodies around I wouldn't even try using the incubators, but I don't. Most of my broody chickens are small, so they can't cover more that 4-5 pea eggs, and my Muscovy Ducks make nests in really bad places. Those pea eggs that I stick under hens hatch in 26-27 days, and most don't need assisting. 98% won't need assisting.
-Kathy