- Jul 22, 2014
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On my 2nd hatch now. 2 have hatched fine. Its day 22. I had 2 pip through the shell but something happened they died soon after. I also have 10 that have done nothing yet. Is there something I should be doing?
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They could have a bacterial infection, birth defects, weak, or any number of things. One thing I have learned over the years is that is nature's way of culling the weak birds. I hate to see one pip and die in the shell, but take it from someone who knows, that's much easier than losing a cute little fluffy a week later, or having to cull a chick with deformities.On my 2nd hatch now. 2 have hatched fine. Its day 22. I had 2 pip through the shell but something happened they died soon after. I also have 10 that have done nothing yet. Is there something I should be doing?
Sounds like a temperature problem. If the temp goes down, the relative humidity goes up. What style of incubator?The first hatch went extremely well. 100%hatched. I have had problems with humidiy going way up and temp dropping too low this time. I cant figure out why but I just have. I candled them before I put them in the hatch box and there was movement in all of them. Thanks for all the info.
Well , the humidity is going to jump during hatching. That's not a problem, it helps the chicks slide out of the shells easier. If you are having a delayed hatch, or they are dying in the shell, then my guess is low temperature or high humidity during the first 18 days. They could be drowning in the shells. After 22 days, I would go ahead and take them out. Chances are if they hatch now, they will be unhealthy. Break them open. If they are fully developed with no pip, I would say they are drowning. I also wonder if the additional fan affected the temperature. Where did you measure temperature? At egg level? And I hate to say this, but if the first hatch was 100%, why would you change anything? Skyrocketing humidity during the hatch is normal. Just imagine all of the newly introduced liquids into the incubator. The humidity won't hurt them.Little Giant. It has a fan it it. The first hatch went well except we had trouble controlling the humidity when they hatched. So my husband bought a fan and put in it this time and it is still no easier to control. As soon as they start pipping through the shell the humidity sky rockets.
I've had chickens for years, but just started incubating. My first run was with the exact incubator you have, and the results were horrendous. I now know that most of the problem came from my inexperience hatching, but I was so disappointed and disgusted that I waited until I could afford the most highly rated, but expensive, 24 egg incubator. I just tried my first run with a Brinsea 20 Advance, and it's idiot proof. I work long hours, can't babysit my incubator, and I needed something that was "set it and forget it". The Brinsea truly is, and if you can afford one, or are selling chickens like me, then by all means buy a Brinsea. 85+% hatch rate, and a snap to clean. All I have to do is add water every few days, and monitor more closely on lockdown. The Brinsea gives a highly accurate reading of temperature and humidity at all times, and adjustments are simple. Temperature never fluctuates more than 0.1 degree.Thanks again for the info. I didn't realize such high humidity was acceptable while hatching. That's what I did wrong. Trying to get the humidity adjusted I let the temp get to cool I guess. We got the fan because the humidity did skyrocket last time and up until now didn't realize that is was ok. Yes we pulled the plugs when we put them in there to hatch. If I might ask you one more thing? Do you have a type of incubator you would recommend over any of the others?