Congratulations on the hatch!
If you hear very loud cheeps coming from a nest, an early hatcher may be getting desperate to leave, but usually the broody will favour the majority if she has to choose between go out with that one and leave the rest, or wait and risk that one dehydrating.
Yes. Hatching takes different chicks in different eggs different levels of effort. Some need longer than others to break out and/or to recover. Let the hens be your guide; they will keep conditions ideal for the chicks at whatever stage of hatching.trust the mamas to know what to do.
If you hear very loud cheeps coming from a nest, an early hatcher may be getting desperate to leave, but usually the broody will favour the majority if she has to choose between go out with that one and leave the rest, or wait and risk that one dehydrating.
Yes. Until they are dry.A clean nest I can & will do but I think I need to wait on all the eggs hatching first
of any sort can cause respiratory issuesdust
I think that's the right thing to do. Broodies are liable to be parasitized while on a nest as they are sitting ducks, almost literally. I remember once being horrified when inspecting a nest while the broody was off and seeing tiny insects crawling over the eggs. If I remember aright I moved them into the neighbouring nestbox to check if the insects were in the bedding or had come from the hen, found it was the hen, moved the eggs back and then added permethrin to a storage box dust box for the hen. It sufficed for the duration of the incubation.Not wanting to upset my sitters I haven't checked them as regularly