To clarify my previous post. Everyone is entitled to their opinion, but one opinion is not superior to another. The FACT is, death is the last option. I mean the absolute final option.
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So, I found this Muscovy egg (how do I know it's a Muscovy egg? Well it was near a muscovy nest but I guess the duck had too many eggs/ it rolled away, but I couldn't get it back into the nest, the duck wouldn't let me) so I took it with me, and well, I'm trying to hatch it. I'm just a poor college student so I can't really afford an incubator atm, especially since this is just a one-time thing. I think it's going pretty well, it's been 4-5 days now, the egg is alive and well, but I'm a bit worried as I saw all these things that are supposed to be done (specific temperature, humidity, checking the weight etc...) and I have done none of these things.
Right now the way I'm providing heat to it is to simply have it in a small round container that fits it with some fluffy feathers I found near the duck's nest, rolled in a socked with my laptop's charger on top of it to heat it. It's a cheap solution I know but that's the best I can come up with. I wanted to know if anyone had any tips for me or a better solution.
I'm misting the egg once-twice a day, turning it an uneven number of times too. I think it's about 12-14 days old since I saw the nest a week prior t finding the eggs then had it for 4-5 days.
I'm also trying to reproduce the condition it might be under in the wild, (taking off the battery from times to time as if the mother left to get food etc) idk if it'll work but any and every advice is greatly appreciated![]()
Have you candled the egg at all to see if there is anything alive in there?
Keep in mind that when I say "wild", I mean "not entirely domesticated". These ducks live in a lake around a ver very frequented campus. They get fed by humans everyday. So it's "The Wild" , but more like, the semi-wild.Without an incubator this discussion is mute. With an incubator it will be a long shot. If you succeed in hatching this egg, you should find a place where it can be raised with other ducks of similar age, maybe a wildlife rescue or even a farm with other young ducks. I agree with others that it will not be able to survive in the wild for long if raised by humans alone and then released. That being said, any chance at life, in my opinion, is always better than no chance at all.
This is obviously implied at me
I've never heard of that story! What did the egg hatch into?Keep on going and let your nurturing instinct be your guide. Few years ago there was an Australian lady that found an egg on her front door mat. She placed it in a bowl and with desk light and a make shift humidity she was able to hatched the exciting creature with the cheering of hundreds from all over the world. Everyone was curious and everyone watching/reading her adventure was on the edge of there seat including me, when I found her article on BYC just few weeks ago but this happened few years ago. Success stories are uplifting and failure stories are great teachers also.
I know all this, I've stuided bird behavior in class. As I said in a previous answer, when he's big enough i'll introduce it the the other ducks on campus. In the meantime, I hope my pet hamster is friendly and will keep it companyWhen alone they have no one to copy off of and learn with, no one to play with, heck, it won’t even know what another duck looks like! Just some things to think about.