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For a while, I just thought that incubating was very difficult. We tried all sorts of solutions each spring. The first thing we did was put in a fan. Then egg cartons for the last 3 days. I bought more and more thermometers. I kept a log of the temps. One year, I remember setting the alarm and getting up almost every hour or two and checking to make sure it hadn't gone up or down too much. I only left the house once for about 6 hours that whole hatch. It swung wildly from 97 to 104. It was a miserable three weeks. I just thought I was bad at incubating. And I didn't pay attention to the fact that one incubator did okay and the other didn't until two years ago when we bought a third styrobator in the middle of a hatch because our very first incubator just kept spiking and I finally realized that it wasn't me that was the one causing all of the problems. However, silly me, didn't mark the defective incubator and so I lost track of which one it was. Smart, huh? I used it again last year once, but this spring I finally figured it which was which. Yes, I would get it stabilized, then I would see significant temp swings without me touching it for days. It was in a room with no drafts and steady temperature. There is little doubt in my mind that it was defective all these years. So I lost one last batch of eggs to it this spring. If it hadn't been my first incubator or if I were smarter, I think I could have figured it out sooner.
So, it's retired. But I've got another styrobator hatching out a few chicks right now ... just zipping and cheeping to beat the band!
Ahhhh, the lessons we learn incubating!!!
I did build my own after extensive research on BYC. Basically wanted inexpensive. Had a large plastic cooler, a frame with glass (for a window), mason jars, electrical tape, wire cutters, drill and bits, twine, plywood, silacone and lightbulbs. BOught WHT, bottle lamp fixture, desk fan.
Planning the design was the most difficult part: creating a design using as many supplies currently available without purchase. I really do get a good hatch rate from it. I prefer to use it as a hatcher.