Quote:
I do the dry incubation, meaning NO water at all in the first 18 days, then I boost the humidity to mid-70s to 80s. It has works well for me.
Go chickies Go!!
Congrats sj3364!
I got a lot of things done today on my coop. I got the door done to the calve's pen, now it will be so much easier to bottle feed the calves. lol Also made a feed trough for them too.
I think that the roof support is 100 percent done, but my dad will have to check to see if it is good enough to withstand the snowload.
WOW, really?? don't eggs dry out in the incubator heat??
The eggs need to dry out a bit during incubation. The humidity is always around 20 to 25 percent, which is good. Too much humidity drowns the chicks, I had that issue too many times before I was told the dry incubation method.
I do the dry incubation, meaning NO water at all in the first 18 days, then I boost the humidity to mid-70s to 80s. It has works well for me.
Go chickies Go!!
Congrats sj3364!
I got a lot of things done today on my coop. I got the door done to the calve's pen, now it will be so much easier to bottle feed the calves. lol Also made a feed trough for them too.
I think that the roof support is 100 percent done, but my dad will have to check to see if it is good enough to withstand the snowload.
WOW, really?? don't eggs dry out in the incubator heat??
The eggs need to dry out a bit during incubation. The humidity is always around 20 to 25 percent, which is good. Too much humidity drowns the chicks, I had that issue too many times before I was told the dry incubation method.

