Hi everyone!
This will be my first time hatching shipped eggs and first time relying on an incubator.
Our x12 BBS Orpington eggs arrived yesterday and have had a day to settle. Our x10 Golden Campine have just arrived today.
Everyone's been checked in, weighed and had an initial candle. I may have gotten away with only one possible air cell detachment on the campines and I didn't notice any saddled eggs.
With the orpingtons, the shell quality is quite good and they are obviously fresh, so air cells were less apparent. I'll be getting a higher lumen torch and re-candling those before setting tomorrow.
The incubator 'is new' and is getting it's test run while the campine's settle. I have two additional calibrated sensors in there with it now to monitor it's measurements overnight (one is smart and will give me a nice graph on my phone).
It is very plasticy - should I open it up to run and degass for a few hours as well?
Some of the orpingtons are a bit chunky, with two weighing in at 66g! Do big eggs ever equate to big boys, or is it just an indicator of freshness and vigour? I've heard the good ole 'pointy egg' wive's tale. Should probably be tracking egg shape for fun, even if I'm a skeptic.
With my incubator, it seems impossible to remove only some of the turning shelves and the turn function does not appear to be pausable, which might be an issue for any detached cell eggs I find. Any suggestions on how to circumvent this? Each tray is wired in with a candling light (which I don't expect to work), so dismantling the tray doesn't appear to be an option. Should I just leave it out for the first 6 days and turn manually for everyone, or just try my luck? It doesn't look like there are many air cell issues at this stage. - eggs were obviously handled appropriately on their trips.
I plan on keeping this post going with regular updates through to hatch.
Any words of wisdom would be greatly appreciated. Incubator has been set up in the bottom cabinet of my reptile Viv, which should be pretty temp stable. My bug farm is in the next door cubby and stays pretty stable.
This will be my first time hatching shipped eggs and first time relying on an incubator.
Our x12 BBS Orpington eggs arrived yesterday and have had a day to settle. Our x10 Golden Campine have just arrived today.
Everyone's been checked in, weighed and had an initial candle. I may have gotten away with only one possible air cell detachment on the campines and I didn't notice any saddled eggs.
With the orpingtons, the shell quality is quite good and they are obviously fresh, so air cells were less apparent. I'll be getting a higher lumen torch and re-candling those before setting tomorrow.
The incubator 'is new' and is getting it's test run while the campine's settle. I have two additional calibrated sensors in there with it now to monitor it's measurements overnight (one is smart and will give me a nice graph on my phone).
It is very plasticy - should I open it up to run and degass for a few hours as well?
Some of the orpingtons are a bit chunky, with two weighing in at 66g! Do big eggs ever equate to big boys, or is it just an indicator of freshness and vigour? I've heard the good ole 'pointy egg' wive's tale. Should probably be tracking egg shape for fun, even if I'm a skeptic.
With my incubator, it seems impossible to remove only some of the turning shelves and the turn function does not appear to be pausable, which might be an issue for any detached cell eggs I find. Any suggestions on how to circumvent this? Each tray is wired in with a candling light (which I don't expect to work), so dismantling the tray doesn't appear to be an option. Should I just leave it out for the first 6 days and turn manually for everyone, or just try my luck? It doesn't look like there are many air cell issues at this stage. - eggs were obviously handled appropriately on their trips.
I plan on keeping this post going with regular updates through to hatch.
Any words of wisdom would be greatly appreciated. Incubator has been set up in the bottom cabinet of my reptile Viv, which should be pretty temp stable. My bug farm is in the next door cubby and stays pretty stable.