Did you wait until there were a bunch of eggs before taking them? I did not. I thought my hen was a bad parent for leaving the nest, plus she made a nest by the highway. But I haven't had luck with incubation last year with eggs from a hen that has since perished, or with the two eggs I tried this year. So I have let nature take its course. When there were 18 eggs in the nest which were laid by her and another hen, "Little Momma" began to stay on the nest and in the three weeks I have been checking on her, I swear she has not left it once, not even in bad bad rainstorms, until this morning, but she is back on the nest now. I'm hoping to see keets soon, but trying to figure out how to grab the keets before they get wet. or run over. It's very hard for me to let nature take it's course.
I know you should sanitize your hands before handling/turning eggs. and make sure the incubator stays clean.I just use the same sanitizer I use before giving my granddaughter who has cystic fibrosis food, medicine or anything. Same principle holds for birds, animals and people. We can transfer bacteria to other species and .they to us.
Hopefully by now you have gotten better eggs. I feel your pain on the "learning as you go!" I'm just glad I found this site.