These are parrots but any advice is welcome!
My pair is young, and this is only their second clutch. However they did not lay their first clutch with me, so I have no idea precisely what went on with it. In hindsight I should have asked more about it. I know they successfully had babies, but for all I know the breeder could have hatched them or even incubated them themselves.
As it stands I had two fertile eggs, one hatched in my incubator because of a complication with the hatch. The other is under them but has internally pipped. The thing is, it has also pipped. A lot. 99% of the pips under the air cell, where there are still veins. The baby is not peeping yet and I know, due to the fact that it just internally pipped today, that it is not ready to hatch. Prior to both eggs internally pipping, they externally pipped as well, below the air cell. I have no idea why. I theorized it was because of violent spasming that just accidentally lead to pipping. But this one is pipping a lot. And I am worried that he will hit a vein.
I have just thought about it, and is it possible that my parrots are still turning their eggs when they should have stopped? I've never seen an egg pip PRIOR to internal pipping, but these ones have. This one did twice. The baby that I hatched is doing well and I have a lot of experience in neonatal care. But preferably I'd like my pair to raise the baby, just because it's natural. But I am comfortable with incubating eggs and raising babies.
At this point, is it a good idea to take the egg and hatch it myself? I want to make sure no veins are ruptured and that it does not hatch prematurely. There are still a LOT of veins in there.
Any advice would be welcomed... But also, if I decide to go get the egg prior to getting any responses I will say so...
Ah I wish it hadn't come down to this. It truly is bizarre and something I have seen before.
My pair is young, and this is only their second clutch. However they did not lay their first clutch with me, so I have no idea precisely what went on with it. In hindsight I should have asked more about it. I know they successfully had babies, but for all I know the breeder could have hatched them or even incubated them themselves.
As it stands I had two fertile eggs, one hatched in my incubator because of a complication with the hatch. The other is under them but has internally pipped. The thing is, it has also pipped. A lot. 99% of the pips under the air cell, where there are still veins. The baby is not peeping yet and I know, due to the fact that it just internally pipped today, that it is not ready to hatch. Prior to both eggs internally pipping, they externally pipped as well, below the air cell. I have no idea why. I theorized it was because of violent spasming that just accidentally lead to pipping. But this one is pipping a lot. And I am worried that he will hit a vein.
I have just thought about it, and is it possible that my parrots are still turning their eggs when they should have stopped? I've never seen an egg pip PRIOR to internal pipping, but these ones have. This one did twice. The baby that I hatched is doing well and I have a lot of experience in neonatal care. But preferably I'd like my pair to raise the baby, just because it's natural. But I am comfortable with incubating eggs and raising babies.
At this point, is it a good idea to take the egg and hatch it myself? I want to make sure no veins are ruptured and that it does not hatch prematurely. There are still a LOT of veins in there.
Any advice would be welcomed... But also, if I decide to go get the egg prior to getting any responses I will say so...
Ah I wish it hadn't come down to this. It truly is bizarre and something I have seen before.