Great report olive

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Great report olive
Quote: Hehe! Townhomes! Now that's a great idea. Or condos. Yeah...
X2 cheeka, She is a beautiful girl!Cheeka, Olive is lookin' good and that's a beautiful egg basket. Too bad you don't have any of those rare and exotic white eggs!![]()
Only 4 eggs today. Slackers.
The weather has been up and down, though. Couple of days over 80* and last two days cool and foggy until well after noon.
The girls are confused. Bird brains!![]()
jchny, how are the babies??!!![]()
I agree with Cheeka. Give Roger some eggs. It should all work out.I need to make a decision. Eggs been under broody BO for two weeks. Due to hatch next Saturday. BR Roger is broody and wants to be a mommy. If I give her a couple of the eggs to hatch whats going to happen when these chicks start mixing together. Is there going to be mommy fights? Will I have to have separate quarters for two broodys and each ones chicks? Can they tell the chicks apart and who is who? Would the mommys team up to protect the chicks from the rest of the flock? I really don't have room to separate three groups of birds. If they need to be separated I probably won't let Roger hatch eggs this time. Then I fully expect to be paid back in full by her BIG TIME. Any ideas?
With a still air, the temp is supposed to be 102. I checked and rechecked. That is what the directions say, and SallySunshine (and others). Then 104 can kill them. THAT is nerve racking!I also agree with Cheeka. Roger may actually be more trouble if she doesn't have chicks. Some determined broodies will try to steal chicks from their mommas. Separate nests in the same brooding area should work fine. Also, wouldn't try to move a nest until all chicks have hatched. Someone tried it because 2 chicks had hatched early and she was worried about them having food/water. Once moved, the hen was more interested in showing her chicks the ropes and stopped sitting on the unhatched eggs.
MC, no personal experience with incubators, but from what I've read on my incubator-a-holic riddled local thread, 102* is high, especially during the first week or so. The occasional low temp will slow the hatch, but a temp spike can kill. It all sounds very nerve wracking.
I was editing my post as you wrote this, because I noticed you had said still air. If you're following SallySunshine, you are probably getting the best info out there- waaay more than I know, for sure! Someone posted an egg that had both veining and what looked like a blood ring. She was told that the veining is more important and to wait until day 10 to candle and make decisions. I'd be pulling my hair and loosing sleep!With a still air, the temp is supposed to be 102. I checked and rechecked. That is what the directions say, and SallySunshine (and others). Then 104 can kill them. THAT is nerve racking!
The fan allows uniform temps. Still air has hot spots and cool spots. I will not allow temps to get below 99, but I can only hope (and I have been praying) that the temps are okay on the bottom of the eggs. I saw veigning in one, and what looked like a blood ring to me in another. Supposedly, you can't see a blood ring at one week. Tonight I will candle all. If I think I see a blood ring again, I will decide whether or not to take it out.