The heat has made it my way so I commiserate with you entirely! Even though I love it, it's hard on the birds. I had to put another fan in the brooder building and move all of the older chicks out so they didn't heat stroke out. The younger chicks can handle the heat a little better, but it won't be long and I will be moving all of them out also.The heat now is a big problem. My house isn't on central air and my bedroom is the only room that's semi cool.
The laundry room is like my mudroom and is ideal as far as having the space and nothing really pulling power there. Problem is is that it's not cooled and I shut it at night.
That's where I've been storing eggs because I used the LG turners and no issue with plug ins. It's been getting warmer and warmer there. Over 80° so I was thinking not ideal for egg storage. That's also where I moved the pepsi-bator.
My room is between 70° and 78°. Can't go colder or it's just not comfortable to me. 76° or 78° are these 93°/95° days. Poor window ac can't combat these temps steady throughout the day.
I'm thinking those temps are fine for storage of eggs. Goodbye auto turners ugh.
Now the issue. My room is on a circuit and of course it's got a bedroom's worth of stuff plugged in. Idk how many incubators I should really be running at once with everything else.
Realistically to hatch what I'd like I'd need at least 6 running full time.
Back to the pepsi-bator. I can run it at half capacity and do fine. That means 2 or better yet 3 incubators running as hatchers in my room. All doable and I have eggs in the big incubator now.
With temps over 90° I've discovered the room temp is up there. But with that and 3 turners running in the incubator it's too hot in there. I checked countless times yesterday and never seen it even click on and a couple times it was above 102°. Goodbye I'm afraid to all those eggs.
Dilemmas, dilemmas.
I'm not looking to invest and pay to run an ac in the mudroom. I'm not looking to overload the electrical circuit in my room.
Ugh, ugh, ugh. And that's not even dealing with the humidity yet. Dry hatching is still running high. Lockdown is a pita because dry ain't quite there and hardly any water puts them to high 70s or low 80s. It's making the balancing act unrealistic while I'm at work or gone.
Mother Nature must not like chicks.
Would you be able to hatch in the fall when it is cooler? If the hens regain their feathers in time, that is, and cooperate with laying. Or try storing your hatching eggs in the refrigerator? You just have to remember to turn them at least every other day. It would be worth a shot to see if that improves things at all, even with just an experimental bunch. We have set eggs in the incubator before that came out of the fridge. You just have to let them come up to room temp before setting them.
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