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I have always wondered how people weigh them to find out if they are losing enough weight while incubating.
BUT, seeing others toss caution to the wind while I hold it up against the wall and frisk it.. has loosened my perception (a bit) and I realize that life finds a way and for some folk, that's enough.
I know many incubate and hatch pullet eggs without any issues whatsoever. In my recent hatch I had with Silkies, four were malpositioned out of 10, one I was able to save the other three unfortunately did not make it. These were all relatively new layers. Don’t know if that’s the only reason that I had this issue but I had a hatch a few months earlier with older birds that went much better.I have Pullet eggs from girls that have been laying for 2 months. They are weighing in at about 1.9 oz whereas my older ones are about 2-2.3 oz. I was thinking of trying the Pullet eggs bc is love to get the green color. Thought about trying to temper the smaller area they had with doing a dry hatch to maybe increase the space a bit. Has anyone tried that with any success?
I balked and went with all my larger eggs to fill the last bator yesterday, so I’ll wait until my 1st batch hatches out and I think I’ll give them a go with a dry hatch. That’ll give them a couple more weeks to bulk up!I know many incubate and hatch pullet eggs without any issues whatsoever. In my recent hatch I had with Silkies, four were malpositioned out of 10, one I was able to save the other three unfortunately did not make it. These were all relatively new layers. Don’t know if that’s the only reason that I had this issue but I had a hatch a few months earlier with older birds that went much better.
I think if they have been laying for at least a month and eggs are relatively normal in size then you should be fine. All you can do is try and see what happens.![]()
I know many incubate and hatch pullet eggs without any issues whatsoever. In my recent hatch I had with Silkies, four were malpositioned out of 10, one I was able to save the other three unfortunately did not make it. These were all relatively new layers. Don’t know if that’s the only reason that I had this issue but I had a hatch a few months earlier with older birds that went much better.
I think if they have been laying for at least a month and eggs are relatively normal in size then you should be fine. All you can do is try and see what happens.![]()
This is interesting! I was wondering if I set eggs from any of my three Black Australrops, should I pick the ones from my biggest (size) egg layer. Looks like the answer is yes.The birds from the 40-50 gram eggs I hatched never laid large eggs throughout their life.
A calibration weight is always a good idea. I've had success with fairly cheap pocket gram scales. The ones I've used were more accurate than some kitchen scales.This is interesting! I was wondering if I set eggs from any of my three Black Australrops, should I pick the ones from my biggest (size) egg layer. Looks like the answer is yes.
Thanks to whomever posted about the scale. I have a cheap one, and I might get one of the Myweigh ones to replace it. And a 10 gram calibration weight.