Mrs. D’s Eggs

Mrs. D’s Eggs

We are hatching 11 Chocolate Laced Orpington’s in our classroom. We started our eggs on 5/4/26 and it will take 21 days for these eggs to hatch. Day 21 will be on Memorial Day so we will have the incubators home here on the farm that weekend and will give updates here!

This was our day 5 egg progressing nicely!

5/21/26- today is day 18! We picked up the incubators from the classrooms today to bring them home to hatch over the weekend. Today being day 18 means we also lock down the incubator. This means that we don’t open it again until they have hatched and increase the humidity to help enable the chicks to be able to get out of their eggs easily. I candled the eggs one more time and I took two out that had not continued to develop which leave 7 eggs total to hatch! I will be putting updates here over the weekend as things happen!

These are the two eggs I took out of the incubator they did not develop very far at all. You can kinda see where the chick would have continued to form.
This is an egg I took out of Audrey’s sister’s class incubator you can see the embryo had started to form into a chick!

Friday 5/22/26 Nothing to update from overnight no pips or chicks yet. There are actually two kinds:

  • Internal pip — the chick breaks through the membrane into the air cell inside the egg and takes its first breaths. We cannot see the internal pips.
  • External pip — the chick finally cracks through the shell so you can see a tiny hole or crack from the outside.

After the external pip, the chick usually rests for quite a while (sometimes 12–24+ hours) before it “zips” around the shell and pushes out completely. That resting time is normal — they’re absorbing the last of the yolk and recovering from hard work. A healthy pip often looks like:

  • a tiny star crack
  • a small triangle-shaped hole
  • sometimes you can hear peeping before you see it

One important thing: once a chick pips, humidity becomes really important. Opening the incubator too much can dry the membrane out and make hatching harder (“shrink wrapping” the chick).

This is an example of what your eggs will look like once they pip.

Saturday 5/23/26 – By day 19, your chick is usually already positioned with its beak tucked under its right wing and pointed toward the air cell — it’s basically in its hatching launch position. The chick has spent days practicing tiny breathing motions and swallowing amniotic fluid, getting ready for its first real breaths.

Around this stage, many chicks are also using a temporary little tool called an egg tooth (a tiny hard bump on the end of the beak). They’ll use that special “tool” to pip the shell… and then they lose it a few days after hatching! A couple of you mentioned this and I thought it was only ducks but I was wrong

This is also the stage where eggs can sometimes start making tiny peeps or wiggles if you watch closely enough. Tiny dinosaurs in training. 

I’ll be sure to post pictures and video as soon as any eggs pip!

10:22am we have our very first pip!! The egg that is next to it has also been rocking!
In the beginning of this clip you can see the chick punch through the membrane on the egg and then its neighbor wiggles shortly after that.

Sunday 5/24/26 The egg that pipped yesterday has made slow but steady progress you can now see it’s whole beak through the hole and hear it heaping!

We also had a surprise pop overnight that has also started zipping through the egg! This one isn’t as easy to see as the first egg because it’s in the back of the incubator.

Sunday PM Update – 5 total pips I can’t see no chicks to see yet.


Monday 5/25/26 – we have chicks! We had one hatch last night and woke up to two more in your incubator. I wasn’t able to get videos of these hatching overnight because it’s too dark for the cameras. I’ll add a video of your walking around like a baby dinosaur and I’ll add a video of a chick that hatched out of the other classroom‘s incubator yesterday. We are still waiting on more chickens to hatch as today is technically hatch day!

This is one that hatched over night in your incubator. The one laying down is newly hatched and hasn’t got her feet under her yet which is normal.
This is an egg from Audrey’s sister’s classroom that hatched yesterday.

Monday Evening update – Monday Evening update- what a day! Out of 7 eggs 6 have hatched and are healthy and doing well!

All the chicks together having a party!

Leave a Reply