For the very first time I bought a doz of eggs coming from Maine to half way across NY State. All arrived intact and I was thrilled. I left them sit on the counter pointy end down for 2 - 3 days. I stuck them in the incubator and candled them for the first time at 7 days. A lot of them looked squishy or scrambled but I left them. At 17 days I candled again. 8 had done nothing. When I cracked them open, they were literally scrambled. Out of the remaining 4 2 looked iffy and 2 looked great. On day 24 one pipped and by the next day I had a Silkie. BUT, when the little chick came out of the shell, he flew out with force and created a hole in the shell of the only other living chick there was. I should have helped the chick out but didn't and he died several hours later. (I named my living Silkie, Thor, the Hammer. lol) The woman I bought the eggs from asked if I would let her know how things worked out and if she could post it on her facebook page. (I only got 1 chick out of a doz. I'm not really a Silkie person but I have a Sizzle and wanted another her size)
So, you know what I did, after all that? I contacted the woman and said "Yahoo! I have a Silkie and his name is Thor. I'm so happy and thank you so much for sending the eggs. I'm not disappointed because I only got one because he is so beautiful. You can, by all means post his picture" And she did. It was not her fault the eggs got scrambled. They were pkg. very nicely. At that same time I bought another dozen, shipped from south of me, can't remember. Same thing happened. Out of 14, 8 were so scrambled but the remaining all hatched. I think that if you buy eggs to be shipped through the mail, you can write FRAGILE as many times as you want but the postal workers don't pay attention. I doubt that I'll buy eggs that have to go through our USPS again but it was fun. (Thor is looking like he's going through teen years. A little out of sorts and awkward.) Not Thor's best looking photo. Mitten's the cat was ready to pounce on him and my 5 yr old grandson was trying to keep him contained.
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