Clean hands
Posted: Sun Jun 08, 2025 7:26 am
When I get the new loft up, (It's all ready, just waiting for the builder to stand it up), The little stock shed is going to be a chook shed, sorry, hen house.
Catherine wants two or three chooks, and the little shed will be perfect. So we got some library books about chickens. Quite interesting.
One thing I did read made me think.
The author writes that when you have fertile eggs under a hen, if you handle them for any reason, wash your hands. The germs off your hands can enter the egg through the pores in the shell and kill the chick.
Makes sense.
A hens' nest will not be very sterile, nor will a pigeon's. But the embryo will have immunity passed from it's parents. It wont have immunity to all sorts of germs off my hands. I wonder if that's why you sometimes find a youngster dead in the shell, or even a pair of eggs that don't hatch?
I always put clean nest bowls in for every round of eggs and keep the boxes reasonably clean. I reckon I had over 90% hatch this year.
I raised 62 youngsters which are all over the state
and according to my book only 7 of them were singles. Two of those were the Big Grizzle squashing eggs until I put a piece of foam rubber under the nest felt, and one was the surprise baby out of the old Thone' hen.
So I am going to wash my hands before I handle eggs to switch them around or whatever. Might be a tiny thing, but the one you save might be the good one you are looking for.


Catherine wants two or three chooks, and the little shed will be perfect. So we got some library books about chickens. Quite interesting.
One thing I did read made me think.
The author writes that when you have fertile eggs under a hen, if you handle them for any reason, wash your hands. The germs off your hands can enter the egg through the pores in the shell and kill the chick.
Makes sense.
A hens' nest will not be very sterile, nor will a pigeon's. But the embryo will have immunity passed from it's parents. It wont have immunity to all sorts of germs off my hands. I wonder if that's why you sometimes find a youngster dead in the shell, or even a pair of eggs that don't hatch?
I always put clean nest bowls in for every round of eggs and keep the boxes reasonably clean. I reckon I had over 90% hatch this year.
I raised 62 youngsters which are all over the state

So I am going to wash my hands before I handle eggs to switch them around or whatever. Might be a tiny thing, but the one you save might be the good one you are looking for.

