Sydney Acres
Songster
Totally agree, broodies are superior in so many ways. I hate hatching chicks in the incubator, but had some unique circumstances this year that required hatching every egg produced by an old flock, and the eggs were so fragile that even the most careful broody would have broken them. So eggs from the old flock were set every single week, plus some "companion" eggs from a single hen of the younger flock (in case only one egg from the older flock hatched, I didn't want that chick to be alone). When the eggs from the older flock candled clear at day 10, which they did every week, the companion eggs were moved to a broody to hatch out. This worked out great until I decided that there was probably no hope for the older flock's eggs, and decided to do one last incubation of the season. I put several eggs from the same hen under a broody, plus several eggs from different hens in pedigree cages in the incubator, with the plan to hatch out in the pedigree cages, leg band the chicks as soon as they dried and graft them onto the broody. Then one week into incubation the best hen from the ancient flock laid two eggs in the same week, which hadn't happened in at least 2 years, and the second egg I collected when it was still warm. How could I not try to hatch these two eggs? So I put them in the incubator, along with three companion eggs from my best hen in the younger flock. And of course the older flock eggs candled clear, and the younger flock eggs looked great on day 10, but now I had staggered hatches in the incubator. I should have taken the 10 day eggs out to the broody until the other hatch was over, but didn't think of that at the time. Lesson learned!I've not a tried messing with the internal portions of the egg in the bator, but perhaps you could do a search to see if there's info on it. My experiences with the bator have been mixed and that's one reason I prefer to let the broodies do the work now. They seem to manage heat and humidity way better than I can.