Mailed Hatching Silkie eggs

Sarahfields18

In the Brooder
Joined
Aug 12, 2020
Messages
35
Reaction score
35
Points
41
Hi!! I have done a ton or looking online but I wanted to see what the best things to do with my mauled eggs.
I just got them in the mail, I opened the box, checked them over.

nowwww..... what?

TIA
 
Id candle them to check for cracks and then let them settle in a carton pointy end down for 12-24 hours to let them settle , they just had a very bumpy ride
 
Hi!! I have done a ton or looking online but I wanted to see what the best things to do with my mauled eggs.
I just got them in the mail, I opened the box, checked them over.

nowwww..... what?

TIA

Shipped eggs are tough! It's hard to really say what the best method is and a lot of the time it's just the luck of the draw.

I started my silkie flock with shipped eggs from over 8 different breeders and tried a few different techniques.

I've settled on letting them rest large end up at least 24-36 hours before setting (longer could be good but I was never patient enough to go two full days).

I prefer an incubator that can hold them upright and where I can gently turn so there is less jostling of the eggs. This isn't always possible and I've still had decent hatches from other incubators that were otherwise reliable (steady temperature etc).

I do not turn them for the first 2-3 days depending on how the air cells look. Even if they look good I'll still wait at least 2 days before turning.

Once the eggs are far enough along to go into lockdown I lay them on their sides as I've experienced a lot more malpositions from shipped eggs. I worry that if they were upright in a carton the ones who were in the narrow end of the egg may have trouble hatching.

I am quick to assist if needed during hatching. I really upped my hatch rate by learning how to assist and assisting if necessary. Shipped eggs are much more likely to need assistance than eggs from your own flock.

This is a good article to read beforehand if you are open to assisting.

https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/guide-to-assisted-hatching-for-all-poultry.72886/

I've had on average better rates with this method. I've tried not letting them rest at all, turning right from the beginning, and not turning for more time (around 5 days) but wasn't as happy with the results.

Shipped eggs are just really tricky though. I might get a great hatch just popping them in the incubator with no special care one time and then get none to hatch with that same method the next time. How they were handled and the conditions they were in I think affects how your hatch goes more so than what method you use to incubate.

In the beginning I was disappointed if only one or two hatched but now I consider myself lucky to get any to hatch (I see how many experienced hatchers often don't get anything to hatch). I've been incredibly lucky in that I have yet to get a 0% hatch rate from the shipped silkie eggs I've received. My lowest hatch rate from shipped silkie eggs was 13.3% (2 babies from 15 eggs) and my highest was 87.5% (7 babies from 8 eggs)

Good luck, I hope yours do well! :)
 
Last edited:
At this point, the most important thing is to let them rest. After you put them in, double check temp+ humidity often. Good luck on the hatching! Shipped eggs can be very hard to hatch.
 
I've just been incubating 18 eggs. 8 were shipped (they would have come via plane for the majority of their journey) and 10 were picked up by my husband a 3 hours drive away. All of the eggs that were picked up are in lockdown (one has already hatched) and that was despite me finding cracks in 2 of the eggs halfway through incubation. Of the 8 that were shipped only 3 have made it to lockdown. All of them started but 3 turned to blood rings around day 4, 1 made it to day 10 and the last died about day 12. It's been quite amazing to see the difference shipping can make on the eggs hatchability and I really hope those last 3 hatch out for me. :fl

Letting them rest and settle is probably the most important thing.

Good luck and let us know how you get on. I've got my :fl for your eggs.
 
At this point, the most important thing is to let them rest. After you put them in, double check temp+ humidity often. Good luck on the hatching! Shipped eggs can be very hard to hatch.
i bought silky eggs online...ebay 🤦‍♀️. We shall see how it goes. my eggs were dirty but shipped very well. I waited 24 hours before putting them in the incubator. I am also hatching from my own eggs. All my eggs are fertile and doing well.I will check fertility on shipped eggs Wednesday. I will post pictures later. This is my first time.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom