Man I am in love with these chickens. Is there any way of getting some fertile eggs to be able to incubate or even better some chicks ? I know its getting closer to winter but i have the facilities to incubate and keep the chicks warm til spring.
I haven't sold many shipped eggs, because it's so hard to get a "new breed" going when so often (on the hatched eggs I've tried to incubate) the hatch rates are so dismal. Of the maybe 6 dozen shipped eggs I've purchased from various chicken people through the years, including 2 batches of Serama eggs, Buff Orp / NHR cross eggs, 3 different Speckled Sussex batches, and the Cinnamon Sussex eggs, the best hatch rate I ever had was 5 or 6 of the Cinnamon Sussex and I think 5 chicks on one batch of Seramas. The Buff / NHR cross, I think I got 3 chicks. My very recent Speckled dozens were 0 chicks on the first batch (box had serious damage) and 3 chicks from the same source on the second batch, which showed no damage to the box.
These were eggs sent from all kinds of breeders in all different states.
When I shipped out eggs to other people, they had similar lack of success, although this past Spring both Draye and Deerfield had some respectable hatch rates, which is encouraging.
However, to get a serious start on an Aloha breeding project using shipped eggs, you'd need to probably look to collecting some "outside" hens of the right breeds, and hoping to hatch maybe one really colorful Aloha rooster to put over them. Like go and buy some Speckled Sussex and New Hampshire Red sexed females from your local feed store, to make sure you'd have at least 5 hens, and then that way even if you only had one Aloha hen and one Aloha rooster hatch, you'd be able to get something going, and could always add to it later.
Shipped eggs have been hit or miss, but Live chicks have done great! Zero losses. However, living in Phoenix makes shipping a challenge, because it needs to be no colder than 40 degrees and no hotter than 85 on any part of the trip. Right now, we qualify to ship out, today - just barely as we're right at 40 degrees this morning. But if I was shipping out to Colorado, obviously they wouldn't let that happen, lows are in the 20's there right now. It all depends on what temps are on the day of shipping. So I have to call on the day they are supposed to ship, and ask approval from the manager of Live shipments in Phoenix. She has the final say. It takes three weeks to incubate a batch of chicks, so there is no way of knowing if temps will be right on that particular day, when they hatch? Usually I have a "back up" tray of eggs in then incubator for the following week, so if temps are too hot or cold there is one more shot to try the next week.
Shipping to southern climates with similar temps would not be difficult at all! I could ship to Florida or probably South Texas even in winter. But for any "cold" areas, that is where things get challenging. Typically a few weeks in March or April are about the only weeks that temps are in the right range in both areas. By late April, Phoenix is already in the 90's, and they shut live shipping down. So when temps are perfect to ship in other areas, Phoenix is often already too hot.
I also don't make any money off of shipping Live chicks so the only reason I do it is to try and set up new breeders. I charge $100 for a box of chicks, but the cost of chick box is $7 plus shipping to me, or about $12 total. Shipping (Express One Day) runs $35-$45. Gas is about $8 as I take the time to drive them downtown to the "main" post office near the airport. I try to wait until the last minute to drive them there, to minimize time they spend in the box, so while it's only 20 minutes each way with no traffic, it usually takes me 90 minutes total in the afternoon. Plus waiting in line. It's about 2 hours total to take the chicks there and drive back.
I ship the buyer as many chicks as I can hatch and fit in the box, to give them the best chance at getting a good breeding flock going. Typically 35 to 60 chicks depending on how many the buyer wants to raise. Price is the same either way. So if someone gets 50 chicks, by the time expenses are factored in, it's less than $1 per chick to me, and it eats up pretty much my whole day. I only do that if I think someone might actually be serious about raising Alohas, because it is a colossal pain in the hiney.
I can put chicks on Craigslist for $1 each and sell them in an hour, and not have to drive across town, or order boxes, or coordinate shipping times. So there is really zero financial incentive to sell chicks, at the price I am currently charging. I'd have to charge $150 per box to make it worthwhile, as I feel $50 profit would be totally adequate compensation for a day of messing around with the drive and post office shenanigans. LOL!
I could send them Priority mail, and make $20 by dropping the price of the postage, but I don't feel $20 is worth the risk to the babies. I'd rather ship fewer boxes and make sure none are lost. To date, there have been ZERO dead chicks out of I think four Live shipments of about 200 chicks.
I know some people just want a few Alohas in their flocks, and don't want to be breeders, so I may put some eggs on
Ebay to sell in a month or two. The money raised would be helpful for covering feed costs here. The current "parent flock" is at about 50 chickens total right now. So maybe it would cover a little feed.
My hope is to one day get Alohas into a "commercial" hatchery in the Midwest so they could ship out to families all over the US. Phoenix is a great place to raise chicks (nice and warm) but a lousy place to ship out from! (Unless you are also in another hot Southern location like Florida.)