The Dollar Hen eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 258 pages of information about The Dollar Hen.

The Dollar Hen eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 258 pages of information about The Dollar Hen.

The second, or more modern type, warms the eggs by a current of air which passes around a lamp flue where, being made lighter by the expansion due to heat, the air rises, creating a draft that forces it into the egg chamber.  There it is caused to spread by muslin or felt diaphragms so that no perceptible current of air strikes the eggs.  This type is the most popular type of small incubator on the market.  Its advantage will be more readily seen after the discussion of the principles of incubation.

Hazy tales of Egyptian incubators have gone the rounds of poultry papers these many years.  More recently some accurate accounts from American travelers and European investigators have come to light, and as a result, the average poultry editor is kept busy trying to explain how such wonderful results can be obtained “in opposition to the well-known laws of incubation.”

The facts about Egyptian incubators are as follows:  They have a capacity of 50 to 100 thousand eggs, and are built as a single large room, partly underground and made of clay reinforced with straw.  The walls are two or three feet thick.  Inside, the main rooms are little clay domes with two floors.

The hatching season begins the middle of January and lasts three months.  A couple of weeks before the hatching begins, the fireproof house is filled with straw which is set afire, thoroughly warming the hatchery.  The ashes are then taken out and little fires built in pots are set around the outside of the big room.  The little clay rooms with the double floors are now filled with eggs.  That is, one is filled at a time, the idea being to have fresh eggs entering and chicks moving out in a regular order, so as not to cause radical changes in the temperature of the hatchery.

No thermometer is used, but the operator has a very highly cultivated sense of temperature, such as is possessed by a cheese maker or dynamite dryer.  About the twelfth day the eggs are moved to the upper part of the little interior rooms where they are further removed from the heated floor.  The eggs are turned and tested out much as in this country.  They are never cooled and the room is full of the fumes and smoke of burning straw.  The ventilation provided is incidental.

This is about the whole story save for results.  The incubator men pay back three chicks for four eggs, and take their profits by selling the extra chicks that are hatched above the 75 per cent.  This statement is in itself so astonishing and yet convincing, that to add that the hatch runs between 85 per cent. and 90 per cent. of all eggs set, and that the incubators of the Nile Delta hatch about 75,000,000 chicks a year seems almost superfluous.  As for the explanation of the results of the Egyptian incubators compared with the American kerosene lamp type, I think it can best be brought about by a consideration in detail of the scientific principles of incubators.

Principles of Incubation.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Dollar Hen from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.