Seriously, I am pretty sure that the people who handle the mail this far north play kickball with package I receive. Nearly every single egg (including the araucana eggs I got from Lanae, which I had a successful hatch with!) came with detatched aircells. I actually candle them immediately when they arrive and label the ones with detached aircells. After I allow them to settle at room temperature for 24 hours, I then set them in my incubator and typically go TWO DAYS without plugging in the turner. I want those aircells to settle, to reattach. It works for most. The ones that never attach usually show no development by day 7 and I pull them. Right now I have 16 eggs in my incubator, and I started out with 24, but pulled the right non developers on day 7. I cracked them open to analyze the contents, and they were indeed fertile.
It isn't the sellers. I am sure if you crack open the eggs that don't develop, they will have a fertile bullseye (that is what I do with non developers, in the name of science
). But the embyro can only handle so much abuse and the mail system is very rough with them. As long as the sellers accurately represent their stock, and package fertile eggs to the best of their ability to they arrive intact, the rest is up to you. It is a serious gamble, and I am definitely sorry you are having bad hatch rates. If I were you, I would try and get hatching eggs locally, or from your own stock (if you can) and incubate them. If you still have terrible hatch rates, you might need to recheck on your incubation practices. How do you clean out your incubator after hatches? One thing you didn't mention.
It isn't the sellers. I am sure if you crack open the eggs that don't develop, they will have a fertile bullseye (that is what I do with non developers, in the name of science

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