No Pipping, no movement, no peeping

defenderinfaith

In the Brooder
Jun 30, 2016
43
5
41
Southern New Mexico
This is day 23 of our incubation. 2 days ago 5 eggs hatched, 1 died within hours, 1 died that night, and one died this morning. The other 2 seem to be doing just fine, chirping and running around.
The 1 that died right away had not absorbed it's yoke.
The 1 that died that night never really moved after it hatched.
The 1 that died this morning had the yoke stuck to its body and we weren't able to remove it without teating skin.

We had 12 eggs left that hadn't hatched yet. Today I picked one that was laid over a month ago and opened it. The bird was fully formed but had not absorbed it's yoke sack. There was also no heart beat or movement, it was stiff and obviously dead.

I just candled, tapped and checked over the remaining 11 eggs. Not one has pipping, not one has movement and not one is peeping.

Do I just discount them all and clean out the incubator or do I wait?

We recently found out our rooster and hens have been eating locoweed, and have learned how that effects fertility and birth development.
We already lost42 eggs in our first incubation attempt (mostly due to human error we didn't know we were making but have corrected)
We found only 17 of the 30 in our second incubation were fertilized.
Again so far only 5 hatched and of those 5 only 2 survived...so far...

Incubator is set at 100F with 40% humidity, carefully monitored. Had an auto rotate and fan for air circulation.
Brooder is also monitored carefully and is 95F with chick feed and water, as well as room to move away from the lamp if needed.


Do I clean out my incubator or wait?
 
This is day 23 of our incubation. 2 days ago 5 eggs hatched, 1 died within hours, 1 died that night, and one died this morning. The other 2 seem to be doing just fine, chirping and running around.
The 1 that died right away had not absorbed it's yoke.
The 1 that died that night never really moved after it hatched.
The 1 that died this morning had the yoke stuck to its body and we weren't able to remove it without teating skin.

We had 12 eggs left that hadn't hatched yet. Today I picked one that was laid over a month ago and opened it. The bird was fully formed but had not absorbed it's yoke sack. There was also no heart beat or movement, it was stiff and obviously dead.

I just candled, tapped and checked over the remaining 11 eggs. Not one has pipping, not one has movement and not one is peeping.

Do I just discount them all and clean out the incubator or do I wait?

We recently found out our rooster and hens have been eating locoweed, and have learned how that effects fertility and birth development.
We already lost42 eggs in our first incubation attempt (mostly due to human error we didn't know we were making but have corrected)
We found only 17 of the 30 in our second incubation were fertilized.
Again so far only 5 hatched and of those 5 only 2 survived...so far...

Incubator is set at 100F with 40% humidity, carefully monitored. Had an auto rotate and fan for air circulation.
Brooder is also monitored carefully and is 95F with chick feed and water, as well as room to move away from the lamp if needed.


Do I clean out my incubator or wait?

Mine gets cleaned out on late day 22, But most of the time 98 to 100% of the eggs have hatched. If you had 5 to hatch 2 days ago and they were all put in at the same time----I would feel the rest should have hatched soon after Plus 3 of those had problems----something is not right or something was done wrong.
 
sigh they were all dead, we've done 72 eggs now, 2 have lived....we're changing their access to weeds and seeing if that helps

I am sorry you are having this trouble. Can I ask a couple questions. What kind of incubator are you using? Are you a hands-on-hatcher or hands-off after Lock-down?
 
Pro Series Model 4200-40W/120VAC

During lock down we went hands off, except for candling at 10 days we were hands off this time. Hoping it would make a difference.

We were told recently that some of the plants the free range are eating [locoweed and red pigweed] can effect fertility, otherwise they are totally free range, given layer crumble, and all out left over fruit and veg (mainly tomato, apples, cabbage, pears, bread)

We also got a few more rooster chicks this year...not sure if it's diet or genetics that is our problem, we thought we fixed our incubator problem
(so far no hens are showing brooding interest)
 
You might be already stated it but did you use another proven meter/s to check/monitor the temp and humidity----there is so many bad reports that the built in one is OFF---some say a lot?

We have an electronic seperate humidity/temp reader we put in, the temp gauge that came on it never worked. it would be off as much as 20 degrees F so we ditched it. we checked the electronic one several times before using it and it worked well. (we broke down and got bantams and Cochins (sp?) and praying they go broody i hate the incubator really, its....annoying and stinks after they do hatch or if an egg breaks.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom