OK, I am so happy to be here for this Easter HAL. Easter has always been a trying time for me. As a kid, I hated having to get all dressed up and not being able to get dirty for most of a whole day. It is STILL a challenge for me, but I have joined this HAL with the expectation that it will help keep me on my toes should other tribulations fail.
Yesterday I started collecting eggs. My hens have modestly shared with me, and if not abundantly, the eggs are still a blessing - and through grace. My hens have been laying in COLD temperatures, and they have to beat (literally) a path through the snow to get to their nesting box. I can only say WOW and THANK YOU. Just makes my Easter.
There has been some talk on this thread about the air cell and correct humidities to use. I live at a high dry altitude, and it is usual for the humidity in my house to run in the 20s or lower. Eggs collected and stored for two weeks have tended to have large air cells by the time I set them, so now I store them at cool temperatures AND loosely wrapped in a plastic bag. I haven't incubated enough eggs to say how much, if any, difference this has made, but it is a point to consider as you are gathering and storing eggs. I need to say that my styrofoam incubator seems to breathe and lose humidity pretty fast; my first few hatches in it were plagued with shrink wraps. The Coolerbator is much more consistent about maintaining a humidity. I made a small a small styrofoam hatcher bator lined with foil bubble wrap; it holds the temperature wonderfully, but even with a water tray almost the size of the entire bottom, it is hard to get its humidity up to 65-70% and keep it there. I have considered misting, but have reservations about doing this around light bulbs. Am thinking. Good luck never ends.