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- #11
If he/she lives, I need a good appropriate name for the little fighter
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THANK YOU for the feedback...On the brown egg, I would put coconut oil or bacitracin.
The white one if you can see the membrane, then I'd use Bacitracin if you have it. Since they are dried and papery, warm the oil or ointment a bit (not hot) but made them "liquidy" so they will spread easy.
Not sure if the white one will make it, anything is possible.
They make spray containers for cooking oils when you just want a light covering, they are about $10 at Bed Bath and Beyond here. Put coconut oil in and warm between your hands before spraying. Good LuckIs there possibly a way I can make a lubricating spray from coconut oil and water? Every time I try to touch the membrane, it has a snapping/popping sound. I'm really worried it will tear if I touch it
I've got the humidity at 63% currently... Should I go higher?In the past (but this was when I was assisting an already pipping chick) I used coconut oil with a very tiny artist-type brush. The membrane will be vascular (active blood veins) until the veins naturally retract. When assisting, I'd remove a tiny bit of WHITE, non-vascular membrane with some very tiny tweezers and assess. If there were vascular veins I'd put it back in the incubator and wait. You have to be extremely careful or you can break the veins that haven't withdrawn yet and bleed out the chick. The problem with yours is that you don't know if the chick was close to pipping on its own. You might try a tiny bit of clear wrap only over as little of the broken area as possible, but that's iffy. If it were me I think I'd lubricate the membrane with coconut oil and just wait. Keep the humidity up. Best of luck, you can't save them all, but sometimes things work out!