Hawaii Newbie 2020
Songster
- Apr 5, 2020
- 55
- 112
- 106
Aloha! This is probably a bit of a unique problem, but any help is appreciated. My family decided to get some laying hens this year, and have had a hard time finding a local breeder who's got any. While we were waiting for something to come through, we thought we'd try to catch some feral chicks. There are a lot of feral chickens in Hawaii, and depending on the group, they can look very much like any chickens you'd see on a farm. I'd heard some people here maintain their flocks this way. Plus, we were bored being out of work and school due to COVID-19, and looking for reasons to get out but away from people. 
Anyway, chicks are super hard to catch but we did come across a hen lying on a clutch, and took some home. I modified the materials I've used to care for baby mynahs that fall out of trees here, and quickly created an incubator. Ambient humidity has been about 60-70% this whole time, and I've done my best to keep the incubator around 100. I candled the eggs and all showed signs of life, but I am new at this and that's about all I registered. I can't recall if there was a big difference in their sizes. I do know that I dubbed one of them Big Lad (though we're hoping for hens) so I must've noticed he was big.
We got the eggs 12 days ago.
Seven days later (5 days ago), one of the eggs hatched, followed by a second (Big Lad) within 24 hours. The chicks are in the makeshift brooder and doing very well.
I have had the remaining eggs on lockdown assuming they would be coming soon. They were on lockdown a day or so before the first two hatched, too. So that's feeling like a long time. I've got the humidity a little extra high. When I gently candle them, I see movement.
BUT the air spaces are looking really big. I'll try to post a pic.
Are these unhatched eggs likely the same incubation age as the first two, and something went wrong causing them not to hatch? Or is it possible the hen had staggered clutches? I've visited this feral site a few times and have seen other nests fill up fast (there were almost two dozen eggs in one nest that had been empty ten days prior) so I'm wondering if maybe feral hens just lay them wherever, and brood communally? I know very little about chickens.
The big question is what do I do now? I'm assuming I'm going to just wait and if they make it they make it. But if there's a chance to be sure it's time to jump in and help, knowing that otherwise they will surely die, I'm willing to try that. I've read and re-read the page here about assisting. But without knowing for sure when they were due, I'd think this would be an extra difficult thing to determine.
Thank you for any help!

Anyway, chicks are super hard to catch but we did come across a hen lying on a clutch, and took some home. I modified the materials I've used to care for baby mynahs that fall out of trees here, and quickly created an incubator. Ambient humidity has been about 60-70% this whole time, and I've done my best to keep the incubator around 100. I candled the eggs and all showed signs of life, but I am new at this and that's about all I registered. I can't recall if there was a big difference in their sizes. I do know that I dubbed one of them Big Lad (though we're hoping for hens) so I must've noticed he was big.
We got the eggs 12 days ago.
Seven days later (5 days ago), one of the eggs hatched, followed by a second (Big Lad) within 24 hours. The chicks are in the makeshift brooder and doing very well.
I have had the remaining eggs on lockdown assuming they would be coming soon. They were on lockdown a day or so before the first two hatched, too. So that's feeling like a long time. I've got the humidity a little extra high. When I gently candle them, I see movement.
BUT the air spaces are looking really big. I'll try to post a pic.
Are these unhatched eggs likely the same incubation age as the first two, and something went wrong causing them not to hatch? Or is it possible the hen had staggered clutches? I've visited this feral site a few times and have seen other nests fill up fast (there were almost two dozen eggs in one nest that had been empty ten days prior) so I'm wondering if maybe feral hens just lay them wherever, and brood communally? I know very little about chickens.
The big question is what do I do now? I'm assuming I'm going to just wait and if they make it they make it. But if there's a chance to be sure it's time to jump in and help, knowing that otherwise they will surely die, I'm willing to try that. I've read and re-read the page here about assisting. But without knowing for sure when they were due, I'd think this would be an extra difficult thing to determine.
Thank you for any help!