there is a water bottle under them filled with water so it can keep the water warm and its better stable temp wise in there from it...
also there is a lot of people saying dry hatch....compared to wet hatch I heard if your in high altitude you have better hatch rate with wet and lower altitude you get better hatch with dry hatch...I had a styro one and hatched 10 out of 13 in a dry setting ...now im trying wet and seeing how much they will hatch...this is an experiment for when I build the big incubator I will be able to pick the most effective way to hatch....I know all my eggs are fertile the three roos are chasing the ladies all the time and everytime we eat an egg when we break it theres always a bullseye...meaning its fertile...also I hope the hatch turns out good cause we are at 7 degrees right now and I picked the warmest eggs for three days to make sure I got good ones....also I heard you can monitor the inside of the egg to see in relation with rh relative humidity with weight loss/gain im not sure which one...and then adjust from there....
well hope this helps
Can't wait to hear how the wet hatch goes verses the dry. I don't think I
