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- #151
Lock down tomorrow for my last egg in the 'bator. We are going away until Sunday so hoping it will all happen Monday as don't want MIL to have to deal with it before we get back!
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A damp sponge or paper towel should work to raise humidity. A dish of uncooked rice can help lower it. Do you know in you have cooler spots in your incubator? Spacing in the turner doesn't matter too much but I would keep them fairly close together. Otherwise I would rotate the eggs to different spots in the incubator to make sure I limit the chance of a staggered hatch. Happy hatching!Guys, I need your help with humidity. My humidity is has been around 30% since this morning, it also hasn't rained today, so it's quite low for Florida. I just put a wet paper towel in the 'bater and I'm waiting a few hours to see what the humidity is. I'm looking for around 40-50%. Im still on my dry run, I'm getting the eggs tomorrow.
In Florida it could rain for days on end or nothing for a few days. So I need a good way to ( relatively) quickly change the humidity, because of the funky Florida weather. I don't think I'll need to raise the humidity very often due to to all of the rain but when I do what should I do? Should I just mist the eggs on non rainy days? Wet Paper towel? A syringe and a aquarium hose in the water trough? Or something else?
Also, I've never had this big of a hatch, at 2 dozen, how should I put them in the incubators automatic tuner? All one one side? Spaced? Or half on one side and half of the other? Thanks in advance for any information given to me!
Not quite September but my Betty hatched 10. 4 black 4 gray and 2 striped. And 5 more to hatch. Pipped.View attachment 1516976 View attachment 1516969