RainForestBird
Songster
- Jul 12, 2016
- 289
- 287
- 152
My ducks and chickens don't know that its Summer and nobody is buying hatching eggs. So I have a surplus of eggs and for the last 2 weeks very little orders. I normally run a brisk business (for me, I'm retired) in fertile eggs for hatching. I wonder if people know that you can still incubate eggs in Summer if you set your eggs as soon as you receive them and start to incubate them immediately in the off chance the eggs got warm enough to start incubating on their own in the shipping box. In this case you would unwrap your eggs immediately, candle to check the air cells (and how badly they were disrupted in shipping) set them in your incubator and plug it in but do not plug in the turner for 24 hours, at least, longer if they egg cells seem extremely disrupted. I have customers report back with excellent hatch rates, especially with the ducks. I insulate all boxes so that the eggs are protected as much as possible from heat. I never use cold packs because the condensation can cause bacteria to form in the enclosed area of the box.