I know this will be long, but I will try to be brief:
I set 33 eggs
14 were shipped, they spent 2 days in transit
19 were from a local friend (thanks @WthrLady !!) BUT we were in a major car accident on the way home. Several eggs cracked, and most of the rest had some yolk on them. I washed them clean as best I could, gently scrubbing with wet paper towel and set the intact eggs.
All air cells stayed at the large end, but most air cells were jiggly.
Days 1-3 of incubation: Old styrofoam Hovabator, incubated upright, no turning
Days 4-6: Hovabator, incubated upright, with turning (they are in a turner but the motor doesn't work, so I manually adjust it 3-5 times a day, every 4-10 hours as I remember)
Days 7-10: Eggs moved to my new NR360 because I thought it would be more reliable than my old Hovabator which needs frequent adjustments to deal with weather changes and requires manual turning HAH I was about to learn a lesson about shiny new incubators.
(well, the best looking 21 eggs were moved to NR360... the others remained in the Hovabator). I had a new thermometer/hygrometer in the NR360 which I checked against 4 other thermometers during the week in the Hovabator and one of those thermometers I have used successfully for 4 hatches so I trust it. The new thermometer was about 0.5 degree higher than the old trusted thermometer. Old trusted thermometer unfortunately was too big to fit in the NR360 or I would have used it. New thermometer is ThermoPro brand but like Govee it does continuous monitoring and reports to my phone.
Candle day 7, 11 eggs showed no development. I did crack them open and most (8, I think) had broken yolks.
Incubation Day 10, By now, I was VERY UNHAPPY about temperature fluctuation in the NR360. It was bouncing around +/- 1.5 degree in the outer ring, +/- 0.75 degree in the inner ring. I had to adjust the settings several times to keep temperature around 99.5, despite having an insulating towel wrapped around it. And no matter what, the outer ring was always cooler than the inner ring.
And by day 11 I noticed the turner wasn't working.
All eggs back to old Hovabator, NR360 back to TSC
Incubation Days 11-17, Hovabator, incubated in upright turner, with turning
Candle tonight, day 17, I pulled out another 10 eggs for early death. Small chick shadows, no blood vessels visible, one has a blood ring. I haven't cracked them open yet - waiting for daylight to do that outside - but the size of the shadows ranges from pea to grape, so I am guessing death ranging days 7-11, which is very suspiciously overlapping with their time in the NR360
So. I know nothing about this incubation was ideal from the start
But what are some causes of early quitters?
Rough handling before incubation? The crazy temperature fluctuation of the NR360? Being turned on their side after the rough handling? The turner stopping? Infection from the yolk contamination (both clean shipped eggs and eggs from the accident had early quitters, so I don't think this is the most likely reason)?
Oh yes. And just in case you are curious. Even though I have to check temperature multiple times a day in the Hovabator, and I have adjusted it a couple times because it fluctuates with the weather, the Hovabator's temperature remains within a 1 degree range (so +/- 0.5 degrees), which is better than the NR360. Obviously it changes more when I open it to candle eggs or refill water, but I only crack it open about an inch for a few seconds when I manually adjust the turner, so turning doesn't affect temperature noticeably.
I set 33 eggs
14 were shipped, they spent 2 days in transit
19 were from a local friend (thanks @WthrLady !!) BUT we were in a major car accident on the way home. Several eggs cracked, and most of the rest had some yolk on them. I washed them clean as best I could, gently scrubbing with wet paper towel and set the intact eggs.
All air cells stayed at the large end, but most air cells were jiggly.
Days 1-3 of incubation: Old styrofoam Hovabator, incubated upright, no turning
Days 4-6: Hovabator, incubated upright, with turning (they are in a turner but the motor doesn't work, so I manually adjust it 3-5 times a day, every 4-10 hours as I remember)
Days 7-10: Eggs moved to my new NR360 because I thought it would be more reliable than my old Hovabator which needs frequent adjustments to deal with weather changes and requires manual turning HAH I was about to learn a lesson about shiny new incubators.
(well, the best looking 21 eggs were moved to NR360... the others remained in the Hovabator). I had a new thermometer/hygrometer in the NR360 which I checked against 4 other thermometers during the week in the Hovabator and one of those thermometers I have used successfully for 4 hatches so I trust it. The new thermometer was about 0.5 degree higher than the old trusted thermometer. Old trusted thermometer unfortunately was too big to fit in the NR360 or I would have used it. New thermometer is ThermoPro brand but like Govee it does continuous monitoring and reports to my phone.
Candle day 7, 11 eggs showed no development. I did crack them open and most (8, I think) had broken yolks.
Incubation Day 10, By now, I was VERY UNHAPPY about temperature fluctuation in the NR360. It was bouncing around +/- 1.5 degree in the outer ring, +/- 0.75 degree in the inner ring. I had to adjust the settings several times to keep temperature around 99.5, despite having an insulating towel wrapped around it. And no matter what, the outer ring was always cooler than the inner ring.
And by day 11 I noticed the turner wasn't working.
All eggs back to old Hovabator, NR360 back to TSC
Incubation Days 11-17, Hovabator, incubated in upright turner, with turning
Candle tonight, day 17, I pulled out another 10 eggs for early death. Small chick shadows, no blood vessels visible, one has a blood ring. I haven't cracked them open yet - waiting for daylight to do that outside - but the size of the shadows ranges from pea to grape, so I am guessing death ranging days 7-11, which is very suspiciously overlapping with their time in the NR360
So. I know nothing about this incubation was ideal from the start
But what are some causes of early quitters?
Rough handling before incubation? The crazy temperature fluctuation of the NR360? Being turned on their side after the rough handling? The turner stopping? Infection from the yolk contamination (both clean shipped eggs and eggs from the accident had early quitters, so I don't think this is the most likely reason)?
Oh yes. And just in case you are curious. Even though I have to check temperature multiple times a day in the Hovabator, and I have adjusted it a couple times because it fluctuates with the weather, the Hovabator's temperature remains within a 1 degree range (so +/- 0.5 degrees), which is better than the NR360. Obviously it changes more when I open it to candle eggs or refill water, but I only crack it open about an inch for a few seconds when I manually adjust the turner, so turning doesn't affect temperature noticeably.