Tankueray
Bird Nerd
That looks like the beginning of zipping. That's good, your chick is doing it's thing despite your best efforts to freak out.Thank you so much for your detailed reply! So I set off thinking these were muscovys and I did my research and found dry hatching was best, so the humidity has only been around 48% sometimes even lower. And I was due to put them into lockdown and raise the temp on day 33/34. To my surprise I went to turn the eggs and one had pipped. So I panicked, quickly removed the turning plate, added the anti slip matt and added a tiny bit of water. In a panic not remembering the humidity would need to be risen so much more as it was around 44% at the time, so I then opened it again to fill the middle part. And it didn’t raise past 48% in 30 minutes so I added some wet sponges and it went upto 78%, since then it’s gone down to 75%. Chick is still bleeping and it’s just pipped another hole next to the current. Praying I don’t kill off the chick by drying it out with all the opening.

Always remember the first time you had to get out of a straight jacket...it took a lot of effort and time, especially with the warden watching over you. <j/k>

48% should have been okay. 75% seems low but remember how small that incubator is - think about being in a sauna vs. in Orlando in the summer, same temp, same humidity, but harder to breath in the sauna. Don't let it go below that, but if 75% is as high as you can get it with the sponges and full tanks, then that just may be how that incubator works. I can't think of much that could boost it higher without doing more harm than good. It's sitting somewhere out of drafts, your AC isn't set too low, and it's not in direct sunlight, right? You might try to make a cardboard fence/wall around the incubator, surrounding it at least 3-4" away, no roof, but tall enough that it blocks drafts and allows for circulation while keeping the humidity from being immediately whisked off by the outer environment. (Take a box, about 2-3x the width and height of the incubator, fold in the top and bottom flaps and then sit it on the table surrounding the incubator.)