Need help with surprise eggs!

mxp1321

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Hi everyone, I am a total beginner at hatching eggs - never intended to in the first place but long story short we keep a few chickens including one rooster, and before we had time to rehome the rooster we woke up to a surprise batch of baby chicks in the yard two days ago! We had no idea this was happening and honestly thought the mum had somehow run away - we had only seen her about three times in the last three weeks, we live near a lot of bushland so assumed she had jumped the fence and gone to live in the wild but was coming back very occasionally to eat.



So mama appeared on Saturday morning with seven beautiful chicks, and we found the nest hidden away with thirteen eggs still in it, not all of them hers. After a bit of research we candled the eggs and discovered that 7 of them had fully formed chicks inside. They were ice cold as she had left the nest hours earlier but I didn’t have the heart to give up on them, so I’ve been using a hot water bottle (not boiling!) to keep them warm just in case there were any just about to hatch. I’ve candled them twice now and it’s Monday night, there’s been no sign of movement but I heard it isn’t always visible with eggs right before they hatch. Two of them smelt awful this morning so I have gotten rid of those to avoid them exploding and harming the others. There are five left now that don’t smell and look pretty promising, but I don’t really know what I’m looking for when candling. I included a picture of the ones that look most promising if that helps.



Just wondering if there’s any chance they could still hatch, and when I should realistically give up? Should I make a hole to check on them? If so, how should I do this? Thanks in advance for any advice, and I know this is absolutely not the right way to incubate eggs, but couldn’t buy an incubator for the unlikely chance they would hatch, and because I would never use it again as this was a total accident not to be repeated.



Also included a pic of the babies, they have brought us such joy! It’s an odd mix of breeds - the mama is white, pullet-leghorn mix, and the rooster is a white silkie.
 

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Hi!

Is she for sure not going back to the nest? That would be best.

The other part of them needing 99.5°F to hatch is that they also need humidity around 70%. I would have thought the hot water bottle could possibly work for heat, but then they're lying there drying out. Try draping damp paper towels over them.

You should see movement when candling, even though they fill the egg.
 
Hi everyone, I am a total beginner at hatching eggs - never intended to in the first place but long story short we keep a few chickens including one rooster, and before we had time to rehome the rooster we woke up to a surprise batch of baby chicks in the yard two days ago! We had no idea this was happening and honestly thought the mum had somehow run away - we had only seen her about three times in the last three weeks, we live near a lot of bushland so assumed she had jumped the fence and gone to live in the wild but was coming back very occasionally to eat.



So mama appeared on Saturday morning with seven beautiful chicks, and we found the nest hidden away with thirteen eggs still in it, not all of them hers. After a bit of research we candled the eggs and discovered that 7 of them had fully formed chicks inside. They were ice cold as she had left the nest hours earlier but I didn’t have the heart to give up on them, so I’ve been using a hot water bottle (not boiling!) to keep them warm just in case there were any just about to hatch. I’ve candled them twice now and it’s Monday night, there’s been no sign of movement but I heard it isn’t always visible with eggs right before they hatch. Two of them smelt awful this morning so I have gotten rid of those to avoid them exploding and harming the others. There are five left now that don’t smell and look pretty promising, but I don’t really know what I’m looking for when candling. I included a picture of the ones that look most promising if that helps.



Just wondering if there’s any chance they could still hatch, and when I should realistically give up? Should I make a hole to check on them? If so, how should I do this? Thanks in advance for any advice, and I know this is absolutely not the right way to incubate eggs, but couldn’t buy an incubator for the unlikely chance they would hatch, and because I would never use it again as this was a total accident not to be repeated.



Also included a pic of the babies, they have brought us such joy! It’s an odd mix of breeds - the mama is white, pullet-leghorn mix, and the rooster is a white silkie.
Get a back up incubator for times such as this if you get another rooster.You can always make one fairly cheap (I did) Chances are they won't be able to keep up with the other chicks if they hatch now so be prepared to raise them yourself.You need more than a water bottle to save eggs left in a nest.What do you plan to do with the chicks that hatch?You need a lamp
 
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