That's great! Yay!
Awe. Cute.
Thank youExcellent news! Forgive me, but I forget which breed Loretta is?
So adorable!congrats Megan!

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That's great! Yay!
Awe. Cute.
Thank youExcellent news! Forgive me, but I forget which breed Loretta is?
So adorable!congrats Megan!
That's so awesome!!Loretta has been up and running back to normal since yesterday and has continued to lay. I am very relieved. Thanks so much for the well wishes.
Good luck Amy and Megan on those hatches.
That is pretty bad. I remember on another thread, @WalnutHill had discussed needing to push something into the navel and then butterfly it shut. Not sure if that would help in this case. Hopefully she will comment. But I agree with Amy, put the others in the brooder, just make sure it's warm and draft free and leave him in the incubator. It's good to have one in the incubator anyway, it encourages the other eggs. Anymore pips?
at least there was a pip!! And it warmed up a little today!![]()
Should I take #1 out and put him seperately so he can't peck at it?
Most common cause is temperature too low.It was but we still got a cold wind blowing through here all darn day! (And shsh, don't tell anone, but they are both pipped so I am hoping that they are hatched out by morning.) I am so nervous about her being in the main nest though. I need opinions (other than my own, shocking right?) With her record of leaving the eggs if she's moved, should I even attempt to move her to the kennel after hatch to keep the others from messing with her or just leave her the heck alone and pray for the best and whatever will be will be?
Cool.
More experienced people, Now, if I remember w/o going to look it up....navel problems that aren't isolated can be caused by too high humidity during incubation or incorrect temps, more so too low are common causes of this, right?
Healthy hatches and no more navel problems!![]()
x2Most common cause it temperature too low.
Thank you Ron, that's what I thought.
Rough or unhealed navels Improper incubation temperatures Follow recommended incubation temperatures.
High hatching humidity Maintain proper humidity.
Navel infection (Omphalitis) Clean and disinfect incubator and hatching units between settings of eggs. Maintain dry hatching trays. Properly store and fumigate eggs.
Excellent news! Forgive me, but I forget which breed Loretta is?
So adorable!congrats Megan!