South Carolina

I had two sets of eggs. I had my first set in an old hovabator that were supposed to hatch for Christmas. Then I got a new incubator and set another bunch of eggs on Christmas Eve.

The silkie chicks are adorable!
 
Really hard day...I lost two of my five beautiful Christmas Silkie chicks between last night and this morning. We stayed up with them trying to get food and water in by hand, but in the end I think they were just not strong enough to make it on their own. After burying them with the three eggs that didn't make it, I checked on my Legbars to find that my cockeral had flown into a window and died. He'd tried it a couple of times this week, but I thought he had learned his lesson. Like I said, really hard day.

But there's always hope. I still have a great Cream Legbar pullet, and will be picking up a friend for her this week. The window will be blocked with wire mesh tomorrow. And I still have these beautiful healthy Silkie chicks who will celebrate their one week old birthday on New Years Day!





btw they're eating fermented feed ;)
They are adorable!
I was going to ask if you were feeding cat food! LOL
Someone else mentioned they were trying the fermented food and asked what I thought about it. I have never tried it. I have hatched and raised thousands and thousands of chicks. I see no reason to mess with success and since babies have new unused organs I see no reason to ferment the food. Is this what you were feeding to the other 2 before they got sick?
And I see all the stones in the water dish. There really is no need to do that. Chicks do not fall in and drown, I swear! That is one of those many myths that are put out for people to read. Chicks will drink water and inhale it wrong and fall over dead but that is maybe one in one thousand that do that. Pebbles won't stop it. It will, however, cause them to have problems getting enough to drink.
Just my 2 cents worth.
 
Really hard day...I lost two of my five beautiful Christmas Silkie chicks between last night and this morning. We stayed up with them trying to get food and water in by hand, but in the end I think they were just not strong enough to make it on their own. After burying them with the three eggs that didn't make it, I checked on my Legbars to find that my cockeral had flown into a window and died. He'd tried it a couple of times this week, but I thought he had learned his lesson. Like I said, really hard day.

But there's always hope. I still have a great Cream Legbar pullet, and will be picking up a friend for her this week. The window will be blocked with wire mesh tomorrow. And I still have these beautiful healthy Silkie chicks who will celebrate their one week old birthday on New Years Day!





btw they're eating fermented feed ;)
Sorry. Silkies just seem to be hard to raise at times. If available I try to put a slightly older chick with the newly hatched ones. I think it helps teach them to eat and drink if they are a little slow. I also will use a medicine dropper to give them water (with sugar and/or vitamins/electrolytes) if I see one not eating. The first couple of days I add vitamins/electrolytes to their water. I do put a little apple cider vinegar w/mother in their water after the first couple of days and continue as they grow up. I have not had to treat for cocci since I started doing that. Fermented feed scares me a little and like Amy said if regular feed is working why take a chance on something else. I also do not feed medicated chick starter. I have not seen a difference from when I did feed it to the chicks. In fact I always had to treat for cocci once I put the birds on the dirt so I did not feel like it was helping build immunity. Silkies are so much fun.... they are worth the challenges
 
They are adorable!
I was going to ask if you were feeding cat food! LOL
Someone else mentioned they were trying the fermented food and asked what I thought about it. I have never tried it. I have hatched and raised thousands and thousands of chicks. I see no reason to mess with success and since babies have new unused organs I see no reason to ferment the food. Is this what you were feeding to the other 2 before they got sick?
And I see all the stones in the water dish. There really is no need to do that. Chicks do not fall in and drown, I swear! That is one of those many myths that are put out for people to read. Chicks will drink water and inhale it wrong and fall over dead but that is maybe one in one thousand that do that. Pebbles won't stop it. It will, however, cause them to have problems getting enough to drink.
Just my 2 cents worth.

I totally agree. I've raised chickens most of my life and I've never used fermented feed and also have never used the marbles in the water. I've never had a chick drown, and I've even used bowls of water for them to drink out of.
 
Thank you for all the support and advice. The two that didn't make it never ate food. We dunked their heads in their water (with electrolytes and a touch of ACV) and at the end were using medicine droppers. I think part of the problem is that their legs weren't strong enough to get them to food and water on their own. I tried for a day to get them to eat food, but they refused it over and over. I tried corn water, sugar water, electrolytes, probiotics, vitamins, regular dry chick feed, FF...but they still didn't make it. The healthy 3 chicks drank from the start and started eating the second day. All I had to do was peck at their food with my finger and they were all over it.
I'm using non medicated feed and I use FF for the larger birds, so I figured I might as well get the chicks started on it now. They're eating great! Digestive tracks are working well
wink.png

Ok, I'll take out the rocks...and I guess they don't need the drawer liner anymore either, huh? Thanks again everybody!
 
Thank you for all the support and advice. The two that didn't make it never ate food. We dunked their heads in their water (with electrolytes and a touch of ACV) and at the end were using medicine droppers. I think part of the problem is that their legs weren't strong enough to get them to food and water on their own. I tried for a day to get them to eat food, but they refused it over and over. I tried corn water, sugar water, electrolytes, probiotics, vitamins, regular dry chick feed, FF...but they still didn't make it. The healthy 3 chicks drank from the start and started eating the second day. All I had to do was peck at their food with my finger and they were all over it.
I'm using non medicated feed and I use FF for the larger birds, so I figured I might as well get the chicks started on it now. They're eating great! Digestive tracks are working well
wink.png

Ok, I'll take out the rocks...and I guess they don't need the drawer liner anymore either, huh? Thanks again everybody!



You learn so much on these boards! I was using rocks in my waterer for the chicks we got from Heidi. I took them out after the first few days but it's nice to know they aren't needed for the next batch. I was happy to see the drawer liner in your photos, because I had read so much about the importance of the surface not being slippery. I never read about anyone using drawer liners, but put it in the bottom of my brooder since it was the best solution I could think of for traction. So, when I saw yours it made me feel like "OK, someone else has used it, it's not a crazy idea." I think I'm going to keep it for next time because it lifts out and cleans up really easy. I never heard of fermented food until your post, which I then googled and read about. Came back and saw all the feedback you got about it. Lots of perspectives and interesting things to think about! I'm very sorry for the ones you lost, but the ones that survived are lovely. Hopefully my next hatch will be more successful after all the help I'm getting on here and I'll have lots of new ideas to put into practice!
 

My beautiful silkie/polish boy died today. He somehow, for whatever reason, got into the wyandotte pen, and it looks like the rooster in there attacked him and pecked the soft spot on the back of his head, killing him. There was only a little bloody spot on the back of his head. I'm going to miss him so much. He was just a baby, 4 months, and so beautiful
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My beautiful silkie/polish boy died today. He somehow, for whatever reason, got into the wyandotte pen, and it looks like the rooster in there attacked him and pecked the soft spot on the back of his head, killing him. There was only a little bloody spot on the back of his head. I'm going to miss him so much. He was just a baby, 4 months, and so beautiful
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Oh, I am so sorry! A lot of losses on here recently. He was a pretty bird.
 
I am so excited!
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I set my first eggs for hatching on Monday.
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Hubby bought me a Little Giant (I know - I've read all the comments and threads) for Christmas and I figure if I can get this to work, I will have learned enough to go ahead and splurge on the "set it and forget it" cabinet type incubators. I have 12 bantam buff cochin eggs and one lone Lt Brahma egg (all from my own birds - none shipped) in there with three thermostats, fan, and hygrometer. I'm doing the "dry hatch" method, but have added a little water because the house is so dry right now with the furnace running. I'm keeping the humidity around 40% and the temps are varying between 99 (lowest) and 101 (highest).

I will be candling this next Sunday (Day 7) and see what I've got....I'm keeping my fingers crossed!

Any suggestions, recommendations, or well wishes eagerly appreciated. :)
 
Thank you HB for your encouragement! If you have any interest in FF or natural old fashioned chicken keeping methods, check the really long BeeKissed thread about the gnarly bunch or the blog about it: http://naturalchickenkeeping.blogspot.com/p/healing-gb.html

Oh no Rachel! So sorry for your loss. *hugs*

Congrats on your incubator Samouw! Great present! Don't worry about the humidity getting a little lower the first 18 days. 30 is fine. Best wishes for a wonderful hatch!
 

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