She said/He said Who's right? Who's wrong? No one!

Sounds like a good plan... if you have a spray bottle, do a quick mist in the bator with warm water as you close it... watch for veins and blood when taking off that piece, and try to get the edges of the membrane to stick to the outer part of shell to keep it from reclosing... kinda like holding a small flap open... good luck!
Good idea.
We bought our house in 1995. I was five months pregnant and we went out to eat. We had just finished remodeling our 50s ranch house, but we had a two bedroom house and a second child, a girl, on the way with a five year old boy in the other bedroom. I picked up the real estate magazine to browse, and found this photo: [COLOR=B42000] [/COLOR] We bought it the next day. Everything just fell into place, I truly believe it was meant to be. It was terribly abused and neglected, but we learned the skills to make it right over the next 7 years. Our home of 20 years: I love our home. It has been a great place to raise our family, we have three good dogs buried under the maple tree, and we have invested a great deal of sweat, blood and money into a sensitive renovation. We didn't restore it as we do like running water and electricity, but we didn't shortcut and skimp on what we worked on. All the damaged old siding was replaced with top quality western red cedar. I designed and built a garage that was in sync with the size and scale of the house. The cabinets were built from a tree harvested on the former farmland. We never dreamt we'd be here 20 years, nor stay until the house is so close to 200 years...now only 6 1/2 years away. We've been custodians, and helped to preserve the house so that it will outlast the surrounding subdivision. The prospect:
l61995245-m0o.jpg
It's only 115 years old so we won't see it reach 200. But it has 15 acres, a branch of the Flint River, rolling terrain, paved road, trees, and a wraparound porch. Room for more birds, though I will only keep enough layers for our own uses. Room for a horse. Room for my cars, my tools, and my accumulated "stuff". Dark skies to use our telescope. Outdated decor, but that's easy to fix. And buying would be financially moving downmarket, allowing DH to retire and take care of things, or to find a job he can do remotely even if it pays less, as we won't have a house payment any more. It lacks originality other than staircase and a built in cupboard and some trim. It's clad in vinyl siding (DH's first comments: it has vinyl windows and siding. I wonder if the wood siding looks good behind the vinyl?). It's only a few miles from my new beef supplier and our long time Christmas tree farm. It's only a mile and a half from a major freeway which will reduce my travel time considerably when I need to travel for work. It's 45 minutes closer to our place up north. And it's between two nice sized towns that offer all the services we could want, plus a city within 25 miles to cover anything else. It makes all the sense in the world. I hope it is what it looks to be...
Looks amazing! !!
Thank you Chic and Avyn for your input. I will keep you both updated as to the progress of the malposition.
Okay here is what I did to help my chick out. I tapped into the air cell to see if I could see the yolk and whatever blood /veining that remained. Then I watched it from there. I could still see a little bit of yok that needed to absorbed. I left the membrane intact and just wet it to see it. It will turn paper white but that is normal. When all the blood is gone and the yolk is absorbed from watching the air cell hole then I started my assist. I am on day 21 today so....almost on schedule. Good luck and keep is posted.
 
I now have 2 solid Broodies and the other hen is not laying.

I should see a dozen or so bantams next week and another 6 or so 2 -3 weeks later.
Congrats and good luck!

x2

Awesome thread... great people...
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Agreed!


Update on the varmit:
Thought I was going to be smart last night and threaded a chicken leg(processed and grilled lol) through the grid on the bottom of the trap. This, along with just barely setting it was hopefully going to catch me something. But suffering succotash, all I caught was air. The ants caught the chicken leg, NO tracks in the moist, freshly tilled dirt anywhere.

It's all good though, We'll get it.
 
We bought our house in 1995. I was five months pregnant and we went out to eat. We had just finished remodeling our 50s ranch house, but we had a two bedroom house and a second child, a girl, on the way with a five year old boy in the other bedroom. I picked up the real estate magazine to browse, and found this photo:

We bought it the next day. Everything just fell into place, I truly believe it was meant to be. It was terribly abused and neglected, but we learned the skills to make it right over the next 7 years.



Our home of 20 years:





I love our home. It has been a great place to raise our family, we have three good dogs buried under the maple tree, and we have invested a great deal of sweat, blood and money into a sensitive renovation. We didn't restore it as we do like running water and electricity, but we didn't shortcut and skimp on what we worked on. All the damaged old siding was replaced with top quality western red cedar. I designed and built a garage that was in sync with the size and scale of the house. The cabinets were built from a tree harvested on the former farmland. We never dreamt we'd be here 20 years, nor stay until the house is so close to 200 years...now only 6 1/2 years away. We've been custodians, and helped to preserve the house so that it will outlast the surrounding subdivision.


The prospect:

l61995245-m0o.jpg


It's only 115 years old so we won't see it reach 200. But it has 15 acres, a branch of the Flint River, rolling terrain, paved road, trees, and a wraparound porch. Room for more birds, though I will only keep enough layers for our own uses. Room for a horse. Room for my cars, my tools, and my accumulated "stuff". Dark skies to use our telescope. Outdated decor, but that's easy to fix. And buying would be financially moving downmarket, allowing DH to retire and take care of things, or to find a job he can do remotely even if it pays less, as we won't have a house payment any more. It lacks originality other than staircase and a built in cupboard and some trim. It's clad in vinyl siding (DH's first comments: it has vinyl windows and siding. I wonder if the wood siding looks good behind the vinyl?). It's only a few miles from my new beef supplier and our long time Christmas tree farm. It's only a mile and a half from a major freeway which will reduce my travel time considerably when I need to travel for work. It's 45 minutes closer to our place up north. And it's between two nice sized towns that offer all the services we could want, plus a city within 25 miles to cover anything else. It makes all the sense in the world. I hope it is what it looks to be...

Wow, it looks fabulous to me! And from what you did with the other one, I would wager there is nothing that you couldn't handle with other one. Have you been to see the prospect in person yet? Best of luck with all of it! I hate moving, but if I hadn't 2-1/2 years ago, I probably wouldn't be a member here!
smile.png



The last one usually is!

I know I just married into the fam recently, and I am pretty exhausted and as a result, more emotional than usual, but I feel the love.
wink.png

I'm constantly running out of ovations and it's probably >90% this thread's fault.

I had ovations all day yesterday, now nothing. I hate it when that happens.

Congrats and good luck!

Agreed!


Update on the varmit:
Thought I was going to be smart last night and threaded a chicken leg(processed and grilled lol) through the grid on the bottom of the trap. This, along with just barely setting it was hopefully going to catch me something. But suffering succotash, all I caught was air. The ants caught the chicken leg, NO tracks in the moist, freshly tilled dirt anywhere.

It's all good though, We'll get it.
I have faith in you... you'll get 'em
 
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