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- #21
Farm life101
Songster
Yeah I thought so.... thanksKeep waiting ..The top one is dead..
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Yeah I thought so.... thanksKeep waiting ..The top one is dead..
Sorry...Yeah I thought so.... thanks
...The other one might be alive?So if this other one hatched it will need a friend right? Last time I hatched a single chick it would chirp VERY loud as if it was crying if it couldn’t see me (don’t want that again lol) will a duck be fine by itself as a baby?Sorry......The other one might be alive?
It will definitely need a friend but a mirror and a Teddy work till you can find it a friend...So if this other one hatched it will need a friend right? Last time I hatched a single chick it would chirp VERY loud as if it was crying if it couldn’t see me (don’t want that again lol) will a duck be fine by itself as a baby?

This is the inside of the incubator but I never hear a fan so I’m assuming it’s a still air incubator
Oh lol. Will turn temp up. Thank youIf this is a still air, then your temperature has been low. 99.5 is the temperature for a forced air incubator with a fan. That stays constant throughout incubation too, and you don't drop it to 99 for lockdown, there's no need to do that.
However, for still air the temperature should be 101.5 degrees measured at the top of the eggs. If your incubator is indeed still air, then your temperature has been low the entire time, and that will cause a late hatch. I can see in some of your candling pictures that the egg is still alive with good veining. For now, just wait - it will hatch late. You should also raise your temperature to 101.5 if you do think this incubator is still air.
I believe this confusion is coming from your typo of 'then' in a previous post where you accidentally left the 't' off having been read as actually being 'hen' and not a typo, and thinking you were talking about hatching with a broody hen.