Quail too big to hatch?

alisamay156

Hatching
Sep 9, 2020
3
7
3
I have a small,cheap incubator and I was given 4 quail eggs that the hen was not sitting on. It's now day 18 and yesterday I had one egg pip then no further movement. I removed the egg after more than 24 hours and the chick was dead. The chick seemed to be too big to be able to hatch. I have attached a photo of the chick after I removed some of the shell. I live in a very warm climate and the past week or has been around 38 degrees during the day. The incubator is set to 37.5 but seems to be sitting around 37.9. 20200909_152738.jpg Could the chick have grown too large due to too much heat?
 

Attachments

  • 20200909_143712.jpg
    20200909_143712.jpg
    497.4 KB · Views: 10
  • 20200909_152840.jpg
    20200909_152840.jpg
    1.5 MB · Views: 11
I have a small,cheap incubator and I was given 4 quail eggs that the hen was not sitting on. It's now day 18 and yesterday I had one egg pip then no further movement. I removed the egg after more than 24 hours and the chick was dead. The chick seemed to be too big to be able to hatch. I have attached a photo of the chick after I removed some of the shell. I live in a very warm climate and the past week or has been around 38 degrees during the day. The incubator is set to 37.5 but seems to be sitting around 37.9. View attachment 2325860Could the chick have grown too large due to too much heat?
failure of a fully formed chick to hatch typically has to do with humidity levels. too low and won’t soften shell enough for chick to break out and too high can lead to drowning in the shell. did you use a separate thermometer and hygrometer to verify your temps/humidity?? EX: I just started with a new incubator and the thermometer was fairly accurate out of the box but the hygrometer was 15+% low which if not verified could have resulted in failed hatch
 
failure of a fully formed chick to hatch typically has to do with humidity levels. too low and won’t soften shell enough for chick to break out and too high can lead to drowning in the shell. did you use a separate thermometer and hygrometer to verify your temps/humidity?? EX: I just started with a new incubator and the thermometer was fairly accurate out of the box but the hygrometer was 15+% low which if not verified could have resulted in failed hatch
No I didn't so the humidity levels could have been wrong.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom