The only other 'food on the table' hobby I have is even more expensive.... fishing! Don't ask what a pound of walleye costs!! I'm not too good at picking hobbies!

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Hey, at least you've got the guts! You're not afraid to clean that chicken poop or gut that fish... heck, most Americans hardly know the fish at their supermarket have heads! Oh, if they walked into an Asian supermarket...The only other 'food on the table' hobby I have is even more expensive.... fishing! Don't ask what a pound of walleye costs!! I'm not too good at picking hobbies!![]()
There's probably not much hope if they were all started on the same day. Be sure to candle. Also, make sure that chick that DID hatch gets some water and food immediately!Hi everyone!! Quick question
My broody was sitting on five eggs (all set on the same day) its her first time hatching, one egg hatched day 20 it is now day 24 and nobody else has hatched. I am moving the broody and chick tomorro and will candle the remaning eggs.
Is there any hope? anyone else have this happen?
That is me also Bee... and my candling is usually done in the coop under the not so greatest conditions, but my only goal is to pull sloshy or clear eggs, if it has a solid air cell I put it back in the nest.
I messaged a couple of folks on here who raise heritage cornish and one sent a very snooty response about how 'real breeders would never sell hatching eggs, they only sell breeding trios'. At that point I was pretty disgusted when considering that the heritage breeds were developed to be hardy and efficient back yard animals, and for a breeder to look down on someone who was interested in back yard animals (and hatching via broody) was not encouraging to say the least.
Since then I have decided I will work with people who still remember what the breeds were intended to be to begin with and who are willing to sell hatching eggs. I am slowly working on getting the breeds I have wanted. Once I have a handful of each 'on the ground' so to speak I will decide which I would like to place into breeding pens based on the 'breed standard' guides my plus my own grading scales for eggs, hardiness and broodiness ...I don't care how gorgeous a bird is, if it can't breed naturally, lay eggs or raise some babies the breed wouldn't be self sustaining for very long, would it?
Your birds are already beautiful though! I imagine it has been even more difficult for you if the breeders are farther apart than they are here in the states... hopefully you will find a network person to help you find good stock to work with... one of the best sources of information and breeder sources I found was a fellow who is actually a judge at shows. He talks to the breeders and sees their stock and after telling him what I wanted for my flock he was able to put me in contact with a couple of good sources to get me started.
Find a pamphlet or show guide from one of the bigger shows around you and check to see who the judges are... see if you can get a chance to meet or chat with one of them and pick their brain a bit.
If you still have Mr. Fancy Pants when your white rock shows up, you may not be hatching pure WR eggs. If you will be getting your WR in a couple of weeks, I'd get rid of the other influence and let the girls lay out his likeness so that when your rock gets there, you can be sure that he is the daddy.That makes a lot of sense, Pete. My flock is very small right now and I'm culling in June when I kill the CX, so it will be even smaller....that will leave a couple of Aussies, one Del, and one old NH, along with the two WR hens I currently have which will turn 1 yr in a week or so. I currently have 8 hens...would that be too many birds for a young WR cockerel(11 mo.) to cover if I wanted to leave them to open breeding and just collect those WR eggs for a hatch next month? Do you think I'd still get clears on that?
I was talking to a fishing guide in Juneau, Alaska (35 years ago) who said that tourists spend $600 per King SalmonThe only other 'food on the table' hobby I have is even more expensive.... fishing! Don't ask what a pound of walleye costs!! I'm not too good at picking hobbies!![]()
Well.. Out of five one egg hatched, one didnt develop at all, one made it to day 18 then stopped developing, another made it to day 18 then got crushed by the mother and the last one hatched and fluffed up perfectly then got crushed by the mother.
This is what i discovered after taking her off the nest and candling the two eggs i found. She is officially the worst broody i have ever had. I never knew how bad a rotten egg smelled until now im going to go have a shower now![]()
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Ya gotta wait and see......said it before, they aren't always moving when you candle(or probably even float) especially day 18.You are not alone and I know how you feel...I candled some of my eggs last night and several of my most visual and active chicks died sometime yesterday and since I had candled the night before. I was heartbroken...AM heartbroken. No temp spikes of which I am aware, nothing was done wrong on my part that I can figure. They were all my WR eggs...there are only two of those left that still have chicks in them and I had to do a float to even find movement in the one, the other is still visual and I can see it move. Doesn't mean they will make it to the end, though. I also floated several of the BA eggs and some still show movement, but all in all I think I'll have half, or even less, of what I thought was going to hatch. I'll do a final float tonight and eliminate all the dead ones....I can't stand to even think of them lying there dead without removing them.
I don't know how you experienced hatchers do this over and over but I think I'm about done with incubating. This is just heartrending to wait all that time, track progress and watch them move and have your heart jump with joy inside you so that it brings a smile to your lips.....then check them again and they are dead. No explanation, nothing one can do to prevent it, being so careful on temps that I checked them many, many times a day and several times each night when I would awaken. All for nothing and all to watch healthy chicks die in the shell.
I may just be too fresh on the disappointment of it all, but right now I don't care if I ever incubate another chick at all. I've just never killed a baby life like that and I don't even know if we are supposed to be messing with trying to create a life outside natural ways of doing so, if this is the result. I've not had too many stellar broodies but at least they produce live chicks in the end and I've never found an egg at the end of a hatch with a dead chick inside of it.
Something is just not right here.
I'm leaving the nest for the day to go to town and for the first time I won't be leaving all anxious about something happening to the temps or the electric going out while I'm gone....there's really no point in getting worried about such things any longer. If they live, they live, if they die, they die because there simply isn't a thing I can do about it at all, is there?
There's probably not much hope if they were all started on the same day. Be sure to candle. Also, make sure that chick that DID hatch gets some water and food immediately!
In defense of breeders, let me say this. A lot of times people will declare they have no interest in showing, just want nice looking birds for the back yard.... after searching out who has the best of such and such breed. What happens is the breeder will sell hatching eggs because the person doesn't really care about the quality so much and they get burned doing this. Breeders know that every egg does not yield a show stopper, however, to the inexperienced eye these culls look like fantastic birds and they decide to show them and tell everybody they meet that they have so and so's line and aren't they magnificent? The people who they are showing them to may have a better eye for the bird on display and they remember that bird and the breeder's name. What do you suppose happens to the breeder's reputation as a top notch breeder?
The other side of the coin in regard to selling hatching eggs is if they have to be shipped. Hatchability goes way down and in my case, I don't like to sell hatching eggs because in my opinion it isn't worth the money invested. I've made that investment twice. I got one chick out of it (just the other day) but I'm done throwing money down the toilet... and I still won't sell hatching eggs.
If you still have Mr. Fancy Pants when your white rock shows up, you may not be hatching pure WR eggs. If you will be getting your WR in a couple of weeks, I'd get rid of the other influence and let the girls lay out his likeness so that when your rock gets there, you can be sure that he is the daddy.