Safety in the incubator

lazy gardener

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To all the happy hatchers:

Just a warning. In the frenzy to keep the humidity high enough, and monitor the temp... as well as the occasional need to isolate an egglet or chicklet in the incubator during lock down, sometimes safety gets overlooked. Those babies, once they have escaped the shell, seem to be determined to find ways to kill themselves. Look at your bator through the eyes of a clumsy newborn chick. Got a thermometer in there? Can the chick tip it over? Got a dish of water? The chick will try to go swimming. A chick, newly hatched, can drown in a teaspoon full of water. Any loose shreds of styrofoam, paper towel? Any tin-foil (I use it in my bator to direct air flow) that will be attractive to busy little beaks? Any temp probe cords that the chick can get tangled up in? Any containers to separate chicks/eggs? Chicks seek out little spots, and can become stuck, possibly even to the point of suffocation. I had a chick dive through the handle of a coffee cup that was being used to hold an other chick in the middle of an assisted hatch. Now, the little acrobatic mug handle diver would have been completely successful with his first dive, except he was still dragging the bottom half of his shell around by the umbilical cord at the time he did his dive. I found him, the next morning, with feet straight up in the air, still dangling by the umbilical cord, which was still attached to the egg shell. Believe it or not, I cut him loose, put some betadine on his little belly button... which was quite stretched out at this time... and he's done fine ever since. So, a word to the wise: check for any opportunity for your chicks to cause injury to themselves or their hatch mates!
 
You are so right! I had a crazy little day old Easter Egger chick jump out of a five and a half inch deep drawer that had NO climbing accessories. How it managed that I will never know.

I really need to build screens for my hatcher...
 
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To all the happy hatchers:

Just a warning. In the frenzy to keep the humidity high enough, and monitor the temp... as well as the occasional need to isolate an egglet or chicklet in the incubator during lock down, sometimes safety gets overlooked. Those babies, once they have escaped the shell, seem to be determined to find ways to kill themselves. Look at your bator through the eyes of a clumsy newborn chick. Got a thermometer in there? Can the chick tip it over? Got a dish of water? The chick will try to go swimming. A chick, newly hatched, can drown in a teaspoon full of water. Any loose shreds of styrofoam, paper towel? Any tin-foil (I use it in my bator to direct air flow) that will be attractive to busy little beaks? Any temp probe cords that the chick can get tangled up in? Any containers to separate chicks/eggs? Chicks seek out little spots, and can become stuck, possibly even to the point of suffocation. I had a chick dive through the handle of a coffee cup that was being used to hold an other chick in the middle of an assisted hatch. Now, the little acrobatic mug handle diver would have been completely successful with his first dive, except he was still dragging the bottom half of his shell around by the umbilical cord at the time he did his dive. I found him, the next morning, with feet straight up in the air, still dangling by the umbilical cord, which was still attached to the egg shell. Believe it or not, I cut him loose, put some betadine on his little belly button... which was quite stretched out at this time... and he's done fine ever since. So, a word to the wise: check for any opportunity for your chicks to cause injury to themselves or their hatch mates!
My second hatch I had one chip it's beak during a game of king of the hill on the thermometer. Another I am positive burnt it's head standing on the thermometer stretching up under the heating elements. It had an unexplained line in the fluff. My last hatch I had TWO get hurt stretching out under my fan. One just chipped it's beak on it, the other almost scalped himself. 3 weeks later and you can see where the eye brow is sliced and a tiny bit is not connected. (People wonder why I am an advocate for not leaving chicks in the bator for prolonged periods?) Why do the companies sell these fan kits w/o a guard? If I do another hatch before I get a new bator I am going to try to fashion a guard for it.
 
Yeah, Brinseas are overpriced
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I think a fan guard would be super easy to make with some zip ties and some plastic needlepoint canvas. And, as I sit here, I'm staring at 2 fly swatters that are the perfect size. Everybody has a spare fly swatter!
 
I have never said they were "overpriced". You get what you pay for. I said "pricey" and they are pricey. Way too pricey for this chick...lol" There's a reason they are expensive. Quality comes with a pricetag....one that most of us can't afford.
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Ditto, that! I count my blessings that I have an incubator that I made for about a $20 price tag, and am thankful that it works fairly well.
I was just trying to get a rise out of Queenie
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Seriously, I have a ton of respect for people that can hatch in those LG microwaves, and there is no doubt that I would feel more pride having successful hatches in something that I made myself. I think the thread on safety issues after hatch is a great idea, and most new hatchers are using some form of incubator that has some of those same issues. I didn't mean to make light of the thread, I was just poking the bear
 

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