- Thread starter
- #671
As I was turning eggs this evening I realized that I was turning several eggs that were not developing when last I looked and that a broody hen would have removed those by now and eaten them. Well, I'm not going to eat them but feed them to the dog and flock I will, so I decided to thin the clutch.
I have 3 eggs that show development and a 4th that is iffy and I can't really tell but I know it's not as developed as the other three.
I took out the remaining 8 eggs and cracked them. This is what I found:
#1: Had a blood spot and quit at maybe the 3rd day. This egg was from one of my old (6 yr) reliable layers, a little NH called Little Red.
#2~Little Red's egg and no development, but appeared to have been fertilized, had a blood spot.
#3~Had a blood ring and quit at day 3.
#4~Unfertilized..another of LRs eggs and it's a puzzlement because I see that little gal getting bred constantly.
#8~Unfertilized
#9~Had a blood ring and quit day 3
#10~Unfertilized
#12~Unfertilized and with a blood spot
So I had 3 quitters, 1 fertilized but showed no development, 2 of the quitters had blood rings, 2 had blood spots(these were what looked like possible eyes floating around in there), 4 unfertilized.
The remaining doers are eggs 5,6, 7, and 11. Number 5 is my iffy egg...I just couldn't see enough to make a determination and it looked like blood vessels had formed. The others are very dark, one so dark I can't hardly see any space. I think I saw movement in a couple, but dark eggs and my eyes? Not sure if I'm seeing things or not.
So, four out of twelve....a lonely little clutch of eggs that will now receive all the heat and won't have to share. I don't know if these are good or bad results for incubation but this does seem to be developing some chicks. Whether they make it all the way and are fully formed and healthy will be the next thing to know about this method....can it produce chicks?
Temps are always stable now but I'll be watching for that temp spike on the 13 th day and will make adjustments as needed. I occasionally add water to the soil under the nest, it feels nice and moist there.
I have 3 eggs that show development and a 4th that is iffy and I can't really tell but I know it's not as developed as the other three.
I took out the remaining 8 eggs and cracked them. This is what I found:
#1: Had a blood spot and quit at maybe the 3rd day. This egg was from one of my old (6 yr) reliable layers, a little NH called Little Red.
#2~Little Red's egg and no development, but appeared to have been fertilized, had a blood spot.
#3~Had a blood ring and quit at day 3.
#4~Unfertilized..another of LRs eggs and it's a puzzlement because I see that little gal getting bred constantly.
#8~Unfertilized
#9~Had a blood ring and quit day 3
#10~Unfertilized
#12~Unfertilized and with a blood spot
So I had 3 quitters, 1 fertilized but showed no development, 2 of the quitters had blood rings, 2 had blood spots(these were what looked like possible eyes floating around in there), 4 unfertilized.
The remaining doers are eggs 5,6, 7, and 11. Number 5 is my iffy egg...I just couldn't see enough to make a determination and it looked like blood vessels had formed. The others are very dark, one so dark I can't hardly see any space. I think I saw movement in a couple, but dark eggs and my eyes? Not sure if I'm seeing things or not.
So, four out of twelve....a lonely little clutch of eggs that will now receive all the heat and won't have to share. I don't know if these are good or bad results for incubation but this does seem to be developing some chicks. Whether they make it all the way and are fully formed and healthy will be the next thing to know about this method....can it produce chicks?
Temps are always stable now but I'll be watching for that temp spike on the 13 th day and will make adjustments as needed. I occasionally add water to the soil under the nest, it feels nice and moist there.