Please help!Chicks Too big?

JustDuckyTexas

Hatching
11 Years
Apr 24, 2008
8
0
7
Hello, I am new to the forum, and completely new to incubating.
A few days ago I had 5 eggs hatch from the incubator after I took them from a nest the hen had abandoned, so I don't know exactly how many days old they were. Plus, two were Banty eggs I had stuck under her.
Anyway, they pipped and then nothing for 8 or more hours, so following directions on the forum, I helped them all out. They were crammed in there, with their little heads and beaks under their wings, with their beaks upside down, if this makes sense. There was no way they could have moved around to unzip the shell, as far as I could tell. No
Now I have a little guy, Banty, who has pipped I think at 20 days, is peeping softly, but mostly just making little breathing noises, and not trying to break out any further. I had the humidity WAY too high, I think at 86% because that was what I first read it should be.
OK< now my question: Should I help this little guy out, too? I don't think he has room to zip!
 
Actually, that is the normal hatching position. It looks awkward, I know, but its completely correct. That being said, there are chicks who grow too large for the shell they're in, on occasion, and cannot get out. I've had it happen a few times myself.
 
That is the position that the chick is in when they are hatching. Belive it are not they have plenty of room to turn around in egg and peck their way out so my advice is to let the chicks hatch. It can take sometime over 24 hours after the chicks pips (breaks) through the shell.
 
These eggs now are a x between a Polish Crested Rooster and a tiny Silky and a tiny Frizzle. The rooster is fairly big. Does that make a difference in the size of the chick in the egg?
 
Most of the time the chick will only develop to the size of the egg. If he is too big for the egg then he will stop developing and die before hatch time. It is best to just wait and not interfere with the hatch. Most of the time you do more harm than good when you intervene.
 
The chicks are probably large because your humodity was too high.
I agree with the previous poster-"helping" is a bad idea. A healthy chick will hatch. Period.
 
Yeah, I also do not help because often they can pip early and even if it looks tight in there.. it's probably not.

If to help I like to say at least day 22 or 24 hours after pipping as they are tired and need to rest.
 

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