Jlreay
Chirping
- Mar 29, 2020
- 30
- 33
- 89
Just wanted to share my recent experience hatching shipped Wyandotte eggs.
I ordered 12 eggs that were sent via Canada Post in bubble wrap. The sender sent 18, two broke during shipment. I let them sit for 24hours pointy end down to help with the air sacs. After 24hours several still have wiggly air sacs, but not fully detached. I put the remaining 16 eggs in cut down cartons in my incubator for 3 days, pointy end down, before moving to the automatic turner.
I had to use two incubators just because they’re both smaller so I couldn’t fit all the eggs in just one. I managed to keep my temp between 37.5C-38C, and humidity between 40-50%. I know the humidity seems high, but this seemed to be a natural range that the incubator would maintain longer. Anything below this range required frequent small top ups which just wasn’t easy to keep up on. I did use a little plastic cup to keep water in instead of directly into the incubator which helped slow evaporation. This took a lot of trial and error and worked well in both incubators. I used these tiny Govee monitors which was so helpful and they were all decently calibrated upon arrival Link - they are $30 off right now
Around day 8 or 9, I candled and removed 9 eggs due to either being unfertilized or scrambled during transport. So I was left with just 7 and move those all into one incubator.
Everything looked great, 2 had saddled air cells, on was quite bad (see pic).
For lock down I cut down egg cartons and left them pointy side down, and bumped humidity to around 75%. Again, 75% was where my incubator seemed to hold the best for consistency. On day 21 5/7 hatched within 3 hours. The time from pip to zip to hatch was at most an hour. The 6th egg hatched the next night around 1am. The seventh egg hadn’t made any progress so I candled. I didn’t see any movement, or hear anything. I water candled and still no movement, so I decided to make a hole and check for life. Unfortunately that chick had a sever cross beak and was missing an eye. It managed to pip internally, but wasn’t able to make an external pip. This was for the best given the circumstance. The saddled air sac egg hatched with no issues.
I have 6 healthy babies! They are either Partridge Wyandotte or BBS Partridge Wyandotte so we’ll see as they grow.
I ordered 12 eggs that were sent via Canada Post in bubble wrap. The sender sent 18, two broke during shipment. I let them sit for 24hours pointy end down to help with the air sacs. After 24hours several still have wiggly air sacs, but not fully detached. I put the remaining 16 eggs in cut down cartons in my incubator for 3 days, pointy end down, before moving to the automatic turner.
I had to use two incubators just because they’re both smaller so I couldn’t fit all the eggs in just one. I managed to keep my temp between 37.5C-38C, and humidity between 40-50%. I know the humidity seems high, but this seemed to be a natural range that the incubator would maintain longer. Anything below this range required frequent small top ups which just wasn’t easy to keep up on. I did use a little plastic cup to keep water in instead of directly into the incubator which helped slow evaporation. This took a lot of trial and error and worked well in both incubators. I used these tiny Govee monitors which was so helpful and they were all decently calibrated upon arrival Link - they are $30 off right now
Around day 8 or 9, I candled and removed 9 eggs due to either being unfertilized or scrambled during transport. So I was left with just 7 and move those all into one incubator.
Everything looked great, 2 had saddled air cells, on was quite bad (see pic).
For lock down I cut down egg cartons and left them pointy side down, and bumped humidity to around 75%. Again, 75% was where my incubator seemed to hold the best for consistency. On day 21 5/7 hatched within 3 hours. The time from pip to zip to hatch was at most an hour. The 6th egg hatched the next night around 1am. The seventh egg hadn’t made any progress so I candled. I didn’t see any movement, or hear anything. I water candled and still no movement, so I decided to make a hole and check for life. Unfortunately that chick had a sever cross beak and was missing an eye. It managed to pip internally, but wasn’t able to make an external pip. This was for the best given the circumstance. The saddled air sac egg hatched with no issues.
I have 6 healthy babies! They are either Partridge Wyandotte or BBS Partridge Wyandotte so we’ll see as they grow.