Dutch, I did the same thing on my first hatch, lockdown was "sacrad" and could not be violated no matter what. I lost almost all of them. Now I watch the eggs carefully and if any are rocking or chirping for "to long" ( a gut feeling no set rule) I help them out. I have learned a couple of tricks through trial and error, I have lost a couple but have saved many more then I lost. My incubator shrink wraps a lot! so I get lots of practice. I use warm water, q tips and heat the bathroom before I start (even in summer) If the chick has not external pipped GENTLY crack the egg at the big end, if it has externally pipped use the hole it has made. When you break away a little shell you will see there are two membranes covering the chick the tougher outer membrane and the thinner inner membrane. The blood vessels are in the inner thinner membrane, this is the one you need to be most careful with. Peel away the tougher outer membrane, if it is dry moisten it w/ warm water and q-tip. as you expose the inner membrane it needs to be moist, make a small hole, usually the bird already will have even if it didn't externally pip, use the warm moist q-tip to gently get between the chick and membrane, your goal is to gently ease the membrane over the chick, the more you tear it the more likely you will cause a bleed in the membrane. If the membrane does bleed all is not lost I have had several to bleed more then I thought they could survive and yet they did. allow the membrane to stay attatched until that cord dries some to keep from bleeding (the cord connecting the chick to the membrane.
These chicks didn't die in vain if you learned something to help future chicks.
These chicks didn't die in vain if you learned something to help future chicks.
