Hatching Quail Eggs I Received Through The Mail

I recently made the decision to add quail into my daily husbandry repertoire. I researched them extensively and decided that on top of my daily and enjoyable chicken and duck care regime, adding quail would not require a substantial increase in my daily effort.

I purchased a $75 second hand large metal bird enclosure, a $50 incubator on ebay, and a few dozen hatching eggs of the Coturnix variety which cost me just under another $50 I believe, with shipping.

When it all came together and I had picked up my hatching eggs from the post office, I realized that my incubator could not hold them all. This I addressed by creating another home-made incubator with egg trays in a box with a thermometer and heat lamp to hold the remaining eggs.

I allowed the eggs to warm to room temperature and followed the instructions for incubating closely. I had to manually turn the incubating eggs in the over-flow region. As the days went by, I genuinely started doubting that any should hatch. They came in the mail and could have been subjugated to temperature and humidity shifts, or perhaps that my state’s low humidity and dryness might come into play with a negative effect over the course of 16-17 days needed to properly incubate.

Needless to say, I was honestly surprised and in awe when I entered the room to check the eggs and lo and behold there was my first chick hatched!

Now you are not supposed to take the first chick out immediately. Opening the incubator can cause a drop in temperature and humidity that can essentially shrink-wrap the remaining chicks. So you are supposed to wait 24 hours before removing the first batch of hatchies.

It is such a beautiful animal right out of the egg. They are so happy to be alive and out and about from the egg. It was difficult waiting while the one chick chirped from within the incubator alone.

The next hatch was in the make-shift incubator which I started a day later and so was expecting them to hatch after the ones in the real incubator, but one hatched and fell right into the humidity water pool so I pulled it out early and placed it under the heat plate in the enclosure.

The next morning, there is an orchestra of chirps coming from the incubator room and when I check the incubator there are over ten hatches! It has been 24 hours so I remove and place the first batch into the enclosure. More may still hatch within the next 4 days.

One Reply to “Hatching Quail Eggs I Received Through The Mail”

  1. Hi there, I just came across your new site and saw that you’re getting started with WordPress – something I’m well experienced in! It’s always thrilling to see how new websites unfold. Building a website is not always a simple task – are you doing this on your own or do you have a developer to help you out? Regardless, I can’t wait to see how your site progresses. If you ever need to discuss anything WordPress-related, feel free to drop me an email at contact@ghazni.me, or message me on WhatsApp.

    Kind regards,
    Mahmud Ghazni
    WordPress Expert
    WhatsApp: +880 1322-311024

Comments are closed.