Ruining it or just Overthinking it?

All I know is that when the weather is misty/rainy, the wild Mallard hens here stay firmly put on their nests until it's dry again. And they generally build their nests in a relatively protected corner under the eaves and behind shrubs and under ground cover when they can. So it seems they like to keep them dry...and they would be considered upland ducks here as water is flying distance, not walking distance.
 
I've read the same -- that's why once a day starting on day 10 I plan doing something instructed as "cooling and misting"; take the eggs out of the bator until they cool to feeling neutral temp when held to your eyelid (why your eyelid? I have no idea!), then misting them with tepid or warm water and placing back in bator. Supposedly this mimics mama leaving to eat, swim, then settling back down on the eggs with a wet body and actually (somehow) assists in the air cells drying out correctly!

P.S. Thank you AmyLynn for sharing all the info!
 
I've read the same -- that's why once a day starting on day 10 I plan doing something instructed as "cooling and misting"; take the eggs out of the bator until they cool to feeling neutral temp when held to your eyelid (why your eyelid? I have no idea!), then misting them with tepid or warm water and placing back in bator. Supposedly this mimics mama leaving to eat, swim, then settling back down on the eggs with a wet body and actually (somehow) assists in the air cells drying out correctly!

P.S. Thank you AmyLynn for sharing all the info!
 
Homesteadin: I've no experience with duck eggs except for 2 mallards who shared the same nest many years ago and hatched 24 eggs! (only 2 quitters). I'd suggest that you ask your humidity questions on the duck thread. Surely there's someone there who's got hatching experience. I do know that water fowl have very different requirements regarding humidity. I wish you the best.
 

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