Tis Time for a March 2020 Hatch-a-long!

I take mine out at day 14 because I read something that was very similar. I'm going to stop turning my duck eggs 7 days before the hatch date just like I would with the chicken eggs because at that point the duckling should be big enough to turn themselves in the egg. I don't see a huge duckling getting stuck on the membrane because it wasn't turned.

I think us humans tend to overthink a lot of things especially when it comes to incubating. I see it all the time where people are so worried about every little detail and when I was like that, my hatch was so horrible. It seems the less I worry about stuff the better my hatches come out.

My first hatch I was by the book and listened to the incubator instructions that came with my incubator... Big mistake. they don't tell you in those booklets that if you're in a humid area you should not add water. So you can imagine the terror that I went through being on the East coast in a humid environment.

I had several chicks that I know would have lived that I think drowned because of the humidity because their air cells were small. I hate blaming myself and thinking of the what ifs, but there's nothing else I can do besides that. After that hatch I decided I wasn't going to go by the book and I was going to do my own thing.

Whatever works for you! Just keep doing it. :)
 
I take mine out at day 14 because I read something that was very similar. I'm going to stop turning my duck eggs 7 days before the hatch date just like I would with the chicken eggs because at that point the duckling should be big enough to turn themselves in the egg. I don't see a huge duckling getting stuck on the membrane because it wasn't turned.

I think us humans tend to overthink a lot of things especially when it comes to incubating. I see it all the time where people are so worried about every little detail and when I was like that, my hatch was so horrible. It seems the less I worry about stuff the better my hatches come out.

My first hatch I was by the book and listened to the incubator instructions that came with my incubator... Big mistake. they don't tell you in those booklets that if you're in a humid area you should not add water. So you can imagine the terror that I went through being on the East coast in a humid environment.

I had several chicks that I know would have lived that I think drowned because of the humidity because their air cells were small. I hate blaming myself and thinking of the what ifs, but there's nothing else I can do besides that. After that hatch I decided I wasn't going to go by the book and I was going to do my own thing.

Yes, I’m in the east coast too and on my first batch. And I had read about keeping humidity in the 45-50 range and I did so and horrible mistake, their air cells are still smaller than they should be on Day 16, so I will just remain hopeful and consider this a lesson learned to just run it dry and go from there. Because even dry it is reading 20% humidity.
 
Yes, I’m in the east coast too and on my first batch. And I had read about keeping humidity in the 45-50 range and I did so and horrible mistake, their air cells are still smaller than they should be on Day 16, so I will just remain hopeful and consider this a lesson learned to just run it dry and go from there. Because even dry it is reading 20% humidity.
Mine dry usually reads about 25% to 30%. The biggest issue was when I started getting external pips and the humidity jumped to about 80% then condensation started appearing. It was a hot mess. I learned from it though.
 
Yes, I’m in the east coast too and on my first batch. And I had read about keeping humidity in the 45-50 range and I did so and horrible mistake, their air cells are still smaller than they should be on Day 16, so I will just remain hopeful and consider this a lesson learned to just run it dry and go from there. Because even dry it is reading 20% humidity.
And wait until it rains, it will read even higher. East coast living 🙄 I Love my humid hot weather though
 
Yes, I’m in the east coast too and on my first batch. And I had read about keeping humidity in the 45-50 range and I did so and horrible mistake, their air cells are still smaller than they should be on Day 16, so I will just remain hopeful and consider this a lesson learned to just run it dry and go from there. Because even dry it is reading 20% humidity.

The type of incubator you're using and where you're keeping the incubator will also make a big difference on your humidity. I do go by air cell size on increasing or reducing humidity on my hatch but at the same time there is a huge variable outside of what the common air cell images show, just like everything else with incubation. I don't "worry" about air cell size too much, I just use it as a general gauge if that makes sense. Even these two images show a big difference. The orange one is probably closer to accurate. I feel like where the white image shows day 19 it actually looks more like hatch day. You can see where I marked my actual air cells on day 1 and day 18 on my Salmon Faverolle hatch and that was a 100% hatch rate.

Air cell candling (1).gif
Air cell candling (2).gif

2-16-20 (2).JPG
 
It would be cool if some of us would both track weight loss and air cell size on different sizes of eggs and be able to make a more accurate "real life" chart. I would want to choose ones that have lost just the right amount of weight so that we were sure that this was a "perfect" representation. I really ought to take the time to weigh a representative sample of mine and compare, but I don't like moving the eggs around and opening the lid that much.
 
It would be cool if some of us would both track weight loss and air cell size on different sizes of eggs and be able to make a more accurate "real life" chart. I would want to choose ones that have lost just the right amount of weight so that we were sure that this was a "perfect" representation. I really ought to take the time to weigh a representative sample of mine and compare, but I don't like moving the eggs around and opening the lid that much.

I have a scale. I would consider doing this. I have lots of experience going by air cell so I guess it would just be for fun to see what the actual weight loss is as well. I'll have to wait until I have another batch of eggs to start from day 1. Should be soon.
 
It would be cool if some of us would both track weight loss and air cell size on different sizes of eggs and be able to make a more accurate "real life" chart. I would want to choose ones that have lost just the right amount of weight so that we were sure that this was a "perfect" representation. I really ought to take the time to weigh a representative sample of mine and compare, but I don't like moving the eggs around and opening the lid that much.

Oooh, plus I should have both bantam eggs and standard size eggs to compare! This will be good timing for me!
 
It would be cool if some of us would both track weight loss and air cell size on different sizes of eggs and be able to make a more accurate "real life" chart. I would want to choose ones that have lost just the right amount of weight so that we were sure that this was a "perfect" representation. I really ought to take the time to weigh a representative sample of mine and compare, but I don't like moving the eggs around and opening the lid that much.
I do this. Happy to share my data.
 

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