Who said you need to turn and control temperature + humidity?

jpmoore

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First post on this site.
I have hatched duck, geese, and peafowl a few times starting about a year ago using a cooler with a heating element. I was pretty good about turning the eggs 3 times a day and keeping the temp and humidity in line and hatched dozens of birds.

However, this last hatch, my temperature sensor must have gone bad and I found that the real temperature inside the cooler was 125 degrees and were very warm to the touch about a week in to the incubation! I candled the eggs for the next several days, and no signs of life. So I just gave up on that batch, but never got around to putting them in the trash.

Fast forward 3 weeks, and I hear chirping coming from the cooler. I was very surprised, since I thought they were all dead and had not touched the cooler in that time. There are four ducks walking around in there, some of which looked to be at least a day old, and there are more on the way.

So, maybe these steps aren't super important after all?
 
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Embryos can be surprisingly resistant. I've forgotten about eggs for 2 weeks straight and they still hatched just fine.
 
If your thermometer was accurate, I find it very hard to believe that they would survive 125°F temps.
I think it was accurate (-ish), but I don't know how long the air temp was that high. The eggs have some thermal mass, and can resist high air temperatures for short periods of time.
 
Welcome to the BYC forums. I tried incubating eggs many years ago, but it was a total failure. I faithfully monitored the temp and humidity for weeks, but in the end...nothing. I may try incubating eggs sometime in the future, but it sounds like you have the magic touch even when you don't try. Thanks for posting.
 

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