Toos and Vlad

'pumping loud music'

Bingo!! I've done this. It's the 'boom boom boom' Females mistake it for another female
 
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' started walking differently too.' (My Net being weird. Gotta keep posting)

One: big puffin' up of chest feathers
Two: walking sideways ('Sideways Boogie')
Three: vocalising

Both males and females do it. But the females, being the heavy hitters, do it much more often.

What you're looking for -- especially if you can pat the bird during -- is the fact of the vocal sac in under the Big Puff: only the females have the sac, hence only females can 'boom.'
 
' The male walked the same as the female for a few seconds '

Watching a breeding-pair 'operating' against interlopers as a pair is splendid. You guys get all manner of interactions and observations that I don't, but all this territorial stuff snaps into focus when you see birds doing it in the wild.

So okay, mostly goes like this: 85% of the time, the male stands about like a potted palm while the female does the hard yards. But upon a signal -- a vocalisation -- from the female, the male will SNAP into formation. Both will go straight to 'Max Mode': seriously puffed up feathers in front; necks pulled back in; Sideways Boogie, and advance in synchrony.

And it's at this point you'll be able to pick the vocal sac of the female, as it hangs a little differently.

And here's an idea: search the Net for a good recording of a female booming. Then play it to your birds. It's almost certain that a female would react than the male. I've even done by just going 'Foomph foomph foomph' myself -- gotta practise when the birds are away. You'll know immediately if you've hit pay-dirt: the female will spark up
 
From what you said, I should have a male and female but I guess spring will tell for sure. I’ll try and get a video clip of a female emu to see their reactions.

Mine being 20 months old now, when would they start breeding and laying? I’m assuming next year 🤔
 
I have erred in not adding a particular bit of data about Is My Emu Female?

Okay: no audio; but:



you see here classical female ‘inter-territorial’ foomphing.

Look closely: you can see LimpyChick’s abdomen ‘pumping’ right back near her vent. She is ‘working’ her whole chest and abdomen to pump out those bass-ey foomphs. The body position is classic.

A female ‘commanding’ a pasture will spend a half an hour or more quietly moving around that area, vocalizing. We have really good data on this from when we figured out that females at a distance reciprocate. Never seen this mentioned in the literature.

Tl;dr: if this, then girl
 
'Mine being 20 months old now, when would they start breeding and laying? I’m assuming next year"

Best to get an answer on this one from pet emu owners. I think the schedule wild birds is a little different

SE
 
So long story short, both my Emus are boy’s, they’re getting a bit close with people these days (if you know what I mean 😅).

The one I thought was female attempted to mate with my dog and the pony’s in our field, so there we have it, I’ve two boys.
 
So yesterday, I bought 4 fertile Emu eggs from a buyer up North of Ireland (I forgot how pricey Emu eggs are here).

Anyway, they had two pairs of emus running in separate pens, so I’m hoping they’re fertile.

I came home with 4 eggs but one is definitely not good, it’s not green and shiny like the other 3 eggs. Instead it’s a dusty white covering the green and it has a smell so I’m not going to even attempt to incubate that egg.


I’ve a Brinsea Octagon 40 with no way of telling what the humidity is, in my 11 years of incubating, I’ve never measured humidity and always got successful hatches. I was wondering if filling water in 2 trays is enough or should all 4 be full of water?

How does brinsea expect someone to know the humidity if there’s no humidity reader with the incubator? I might have to get a humidity reader from Amazon but without a humidity reader how would one know?

Eggs are at 36.3 degrees celsius (97.5 F). The eggs are too heavy for the automatic turner so I rock the eggs from one side to the other and so on. Eggs fit in perfectly, humidity is the only concern.
 

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