I read and re-read SallySunshine's awesome Hatching eggs 101 page. (Last year too!)
It's perfect for anyone starting out or anyone who wants to brush up on the Zen of hatching.
This year, I will be doing it a little differently- I'll be getting shipped eggs (Yay!!!)
and I noticed that she recommends with the shipped ones letting the eggs settle in an egg carton for about 48 hours so the air cells can re-attach after shipping. Some of those air cell and scrambled photos were a little scary!
This is a dumb question, but does that 48 hours mean in room temperature- not in the incubator... I assume that's what I do? In an egg carton with holes for ventilation, and then I would just add them to the incubator the same time that I add the other eggs all together, and let them turn in the auto-turner?
If any egg-sperts out there who have experience hatching shipped eggs have any more tips, I'd be super-grateful!
It's perfect for anyone starting out or anyone who wants to brush up on the Zen of hatching.
This year, I will be doing it a little differently- I'll be getting shipped eggs (Yay!!!)
and I noticed that she recommends with the shipped ones letting the eggs settle in an egg carton for about 48 hours so the air cells can re-attach after shipping. Some of those air cell and scrambled photos were a little scary!
This is a dumb question, but does that 48 hours mean in room temperature- not in the incubator... I assume that's what I do? In an egg carton with holes for ventilation, and then I would just add them to the incubator the same time that I add the other eggs all together, and let them turn in the auto-turner?
If any egg-sperts out there who have experience hatching shipped eggs have any more tips, I'd be super-grateful!
