Quote:
oh drat, what's up with Sylvia's eggs? I know you were really hoping that all of them would hatch
you might want to give them maybe another day or two or three, I've heard of some taking 25 days ...
if you want, you can let the chicks snuggle right up against, in contact with, that heater --- mine liked to shove their fuzzybutts up against it for a few moments at a time -- then later they really enjoyed perching on a wide fallen branch, a couple of inches away from the heater
I had 2x4s sitting directly against the thing, stabilizing it ... then some of the chicks thought it would be neat to get BEHIND it !
Nah, they're doing fine as it is, I can't clean the tub by myself, and the people who trashed it are too busy to do it (although neither are working today, since it's his every-other-Friday off and she has an optomitrist appointment) and there's no way to put the heater in the plastic box that doesn't offend my safety rules. They have a nice heavy mohair sweater to snuggle under- the one my daughter wore as a winter coat when she was in second grade, and refused to wear anything else even when Grammie took her coat shopping, until she got a hand-me-down parka from her teacher's daughter
Now I'm also trying to figure out when I can move the nine new chicks in with the five old ones; I just watched the silver boy fly from the water dish to the rock, and the big 'uns are more than twice as big as the small. Is there some sort of plateau when five day's difference in age doesn't equal such a huge difference in size? Soon, I hope?
I hope a more experienced eggs-pert answers this -- but for what it's worth, in the natural world there often seem to be five days' difference in chicks ... and here they are eating their own food, not waiting for parents to bring food to them and feed them ...
I've also read of incubator hatching, stretching over 3 or 4 or 5 days, with the first-hatched chicks still in the incubator with the newest
(and you won't have the problem of the broody inadvertently stepping on one of them either, as both Dawn and Dana did)
I'd give them a couple of days and I bet the size difference will be considerably less; also the newest ones will have found their "sea legs"
however, I'm a bit disappointed in my girls; 9 out of 18 eggs from this last hatch; versus 4 out of 6 from the first one ... and yet all those were really fresh, none more than 2 days old, and hand-carried ...
(and every egg I've opened here, to eat, has had a definitely bullseye -- but then I remember that Dawn had to deal with one BAD egg that exploded)