I am using Brinsea's high intensity egg candler. I can see enough into the eggs to tell if they are clear or not.Once as a kid my mom parked in a handicap spot and I said "mom you can park in a handicap spot!". To which she replied "anyone with four kids is considered handicapped". Now I was a kid and had no idea it was a joke. Fast forward a few months later and me and my sister are out shoping with my aunt and her 2 kids. She's going around the lot looking for a place to park, as we passed the handicapped spots (yeah you guessed it!) "Aunt Deb why don't you parke there?" "I can't it's a handicap spot" "Well mom says anyone with four kids is handicapped and you got four in the car right now!". I was dead serious, thought it was some kind of law I did!
Hey! Candling question. If I have dark and thick shelled eggs is there anything you can do to candle them? I tried using my El Cheapo (I that's a brand name in China or maybe it's a itsgonnabreaksoon?) LED flashlight with 9 LEDs. It was not bright enough to see anything. What are you successful people using?
Also, I'ver read that some of you are doing a turkey hatch next. How hard it is to hatch turkeys? Are they any different than chickens? Where could I procure turkey eggs from? I've only ever raised on, a broad breasted bronze. I'd love to try a midget white or six!
Your best bet would be to check the air cell. You should be able to see some of the veins there. Keep them unless they are obviously clear. Watch for weeping and if you smell sulfur, put the bad egg into a zip lock bag and get it out of the house!

Ron
Edited to say these are very dark Bev Davis Marans eggs
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