About 2 weeks ago, I found my Dark Cornish sitting on 9 eggs. I thought they had stopped laying so I hadn't been checking. One hen was broody, but isn't good with eggs (she already smashed a few) and a horrible mother. So I moved the eggs into the incubator and I knew I would have a staggered hatch. I candled the eggs on Saturday and the eggs were NOWHERE near as developed as the eggs that I was moving to lock down that day. Well, the eggs I moved to lock down hatched yesterday and I gave them to a broody.
Well I looked at the Cornish eggs thinking I would need to candle them tonight to see if they needed to be moved to lock down yet. I saw one egg that was pipped. I took the top off for an emergency move to lock down and found a baby that had already hatched and fell between the turner and the wall. At first, I thought it had yolk sack issues because I saw a fluid filled sac attached to the chick. Upon further inspection I found that it was a fluid filled blister on the poor baby's right thigh. I surmise the problem was caused by the chick trying to stand up and move next to the turner. I think the chick hatched this morning because it is mostly fluffed out. I gave the baby some Nutri Drench (straight) and decided to leave the blister intact. The effected area is about the size of a nickle and I don't want to have that big of an open wound on such a little baby.
Note: this is not a umbilical issue. The umbilical is closed up nicely.
Is there anything else I can do?
Well I looked at the Cornish eggs thinking I would need to candle them tonight to see if they needed to be moved to lock down yet. I saw one egg that was pipped. I took the top off for an emergency move to lock down and found a baby that had already hatched and fell between the turner and the wall. At first, I thought it had yolk sack issues because I saw a fluid filled sac attached to the chick. Upon further inspection I found that it was a fluid filled blister on the poor baby's right thigh. I surmise the problem was caused by the chick trying to stand up and move next to the turner. I think the chick hatched this morning because it is mostly fluffed out. I gave the baby some Nutri Drench (straight) and decided to leave the blister intact. The effected area is about the size of a nickle and I don't want to have that big of an open wound on such a little baby.
Note: this is not a umbilical issue. The umbilical is closed up nicely.
Is there anything else I can do?