Too Early for Feb Hatch-A-Long Thread??

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Let's talk a bit about humidity. I was going through the incubation guides and was surprised to see humidity levels between 30 and 60% recommended for incubation. I usually dry incubate and don't add any water until I'm in the last three days and ready to hatch. Then I go up to 60-65% for hatch. What is everyone else doing. Back when I bought my incubator the booklet that came with it said that you wanted between 20-30% humidity for incubation and 50-60 at lockdown so it seems things are changing a bit. Interested in what everyone else is doing.

This hatch will be my test on humidity and if dry incubation might be the trick for better hatch rates on shipped eggs.

I hatched two batches of shipped eggs two weeks apart in November and beginning of December. Everything I read, at the time, said around 50% humidity. So I kept it very humid during the entire incubation. The eggs air cells were VERY small on lock down with both batches. Exactly 50% of them hatched. The rest were fully formed and died a couple days before hatch day. They were still in a bunch of fluid when I opened them.

The two new batches of shipped eggs were started with zero water added to the incubator. The humidity in the room their in stays between 20% and 30%. So far it’s proving to be better already, but the true test will be this Friday and Saturday. First half go into lock down Wednesday evening.

I will know here in the next week and a half if dry incubating ups the hatch rate on shipped eggs.
 
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We run humidity around 25-35% for the incubation period, unless we are incubating small, light or porous eggs then we might bump it up to 40%. lockdown I like to see 60%+.
I agree that the color, size and where the eggs came from(shipped or not, or elevation) will make a difference as to what humidity will work best. We live at 6000 feet above sea level and in a very dry climate so where some folks can run without water to hit 30% we hit 10% or less without water... best advice I ever read was to watch air cells and adjust accordingly.
 
I was going to offer some extra barnyard mix eggs to you, then I realized that virginia is a far ways off and I am not NPIP .... oops. Maybe your girls will get in gear?
Yeah VA requires shipped eggs to be NPIP 😒 I haven't really found many on here who can ship me eggs.

I'm getting about four eggs a day, but that's about half of what I should be getting every day. I'm sure they will start back up soon and I'm hoping I can find my Polish eggs because she's hiding them on me 😂
 
Yeah VA requires shipped eggs to be NPIP 😒 I haven't really found many on here who can ship me eggs.

I'm getting about four eggs a day, but that's about half of what I should be getting every day. I'm sure they will start back up soon and I'm hoping I can find my Polish eggs because she's hiding them on me 😂
HALF wow wish I could get my girls to give me those kind of numbers.... out of 80ish plus chickens I get up to 24 a day currently. ok so maybe half or more are 2-6 years old... maybe this is my fault???? well 24 still looks MUCH better than the 7 I was getting at the begging of dec. Usually I add a light to one of my 2 coops but this year my GFI thingy was not having it! so natural light, or close to it, and the girls are comming back into lay now.
 
HALF wow wish I could get my girls to give me those kind of numbers.... out of 80ish plus chickens I get up to 24 a day currently. ok so maybe half or more are 2-6 years old... maybe this is my fault???? well 24 still looks MUCH better than the 7 I was getting at the begging of dec. Usually I add a light to one of my 2 coops but this year my GFI thingy was not having it! so natural light, or close to it, and the girls are comming back into lay now.
I haven't added any supplemental lighting and my laying chickens are between 8 months and 2 years old.

24 is definitely better than 7. I had a few days where I got none and I told them they were a bunch of free loaders 😂
 

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