After hatching many many ducklings i can say YOU NEED TO REFRAIN yourself from opening the incubator, Duckling need more humidity then chooks so its imperative to not open the incubator from day 26 till the end of day 29 and if you still have some that are pipping dont open the incubator till day 30. some can be late bloomers, the ducklings will last for up to 48 hours from the yolk they absorb, if you have an early bird you could possibly open up incubator very fast retrieve that duckling and close the lid fast, never leave that lid open regardless. you can also add a wet sponge away from any contact of eggs on day 26 this will help rise the humidity. we all make mistakes when we start incubating, i have lost many eggs due to my mistakes when i first started but now being a breeder of ducks and chickens and Quail i have learned to just not open the incubator so the baby's dont get shrink wrapped, Dont be put off just remember what happens and take it as a learning curve, hope this reads friendly as it is friendly advice as i love to see others breeding and incubating their own stock. Margie from Australia
Also, if you have to open it for some reason (hatching or hatched bird problems), spraying the eggs with a little water right then can stop the drop in humidity from causing shrink wrapping. Just make sure its warm water
Congratulations! Those are some cute babies. I keep a spray bottle full of filtered water in the cupboard that I put the incubator in. It sits right next to the incubator keeping the water warmish. I spritz the eggs each time I open the incubator. When I need to help a duckling out of a shrink wrapped membrane, I keep a bowl of warm water with me and between dabbing the egg and dipping the egg, it's easier to get the tight membrane to release. I suspect low humidity was a problem with how the shells stuck to some of the goslings. That could effect hatch rates too. I will add to the other's comments, please avoid opening the incubator during hatch, or open quick and a light spritz and close quick if you need to help a bird or get some rowdy day olds out to stop knocking the other eggs around. Hatching is so much fun.
Yes this video was giving me massive anxiety as a tutorial to hatch eggs and seeing him shrink wrapping ducklings by repeatedly opening the incubator and leaving it open for massive lengths of time. I’ve seen this on every hatching video I’ve watched this year. People just not doing their homework. No hard feelings as I know people make mistakes but it’s still really stressful for me to watch.
If the bird isn’t hatching on his own after a long while, don’t remove the shell. There are still blood vessels between him and it you will rip. You can however press gently the shell, like the mother would by sitting on the eggs. That does help often when the bird is too weak to finish hatching on his own.
Sirin G- I agree. I had a 400 egg Sears wet hatch cedar incubator. Hatched hundreds of eggs with a 98% hatch rate. I would check them twice a day and hand turn the eggs. Would do that again. It was very rewarding. I enjoyed that the goslings would talk to me through the shell on the 26th day! I'm tempted to raise Pilgrims, because they appear to be an endangered breed. I normally hatch Standard Toulouse.
Sirin G....Im here to ask help! I have 10 Sebastopol Geese eggs in the bator….I have hatched this breed for years with little problems however yesterday inoticed one of the eggs external pipping on day 25. The gosling is breaking threw the SMALL end of the shell....Ive never experienced this have you? Im concerned that this baby will not make it...its on hour 13 and although its making progress its pipping is becoming faint…..any suggestions for abackwards hatch? TYSM!
Bassem B. In Europe we have learned that animals are only creatures with four legs.This is very abusive term for all birds. It is actually very shocking hearing this primitive term.I was studying biology, it was my favorite subject. My professor will kill anybody naming birds animals. Is that what American schools are teaching?
@@liluniadomoczowski5783 Animals (also called Metazoa) are multicellular eukaryotic organisms that form the biological kingdom Animalia. All Aves are animals. Humans are animals. Insects are animals. Coral is an animal. Almost all of the large motile organisms out there are animals.
@@builtontherockhomestead9390 she just carelessly ripped into the shell of a still-bloody baby bird while hyperventilating and you think she'd make a good nurse? Well yea, cuz nurses and doctors are the number one cause of death in this country according to a Johns Hopkins study, she's definitely on par with the rest of them!! You should be more careful before endorsing anyone as a healthcare professional. Basically anyone in the field right now should be disregarded unless they're renouncing their formal education and their peers. You're literally a genocide denier right now if you disagree with what I just said.
That little duck was kind of a butthole to the goslings. Super cute though, all of them. Poor Allison trying to save that one Gosling with the developmental defects. This channel always makes me smile, even though sometimes sad stuff happens in the farm there is always so much to bring joy, thank you guys so much for sharing so much of your lives with the world. Best wishes from Seattle, WA.
My wife who was the science teacher. Retired now, was talking back to you on screen. She has hatched eggs every spring in her classroom. She was telling you that first group was still ok.
I know it's hard to leave them alone while they're hatching but you need to. You also need to stop helping if you see blood coming, it means it still has a few hours if not a day to go, just moisten it every few hours to make sure it doesn't dry up. I say all this from experience, it's heartbreaking cuz you wish you could help them all but have to learn somehow.
medical professionals like her kill actual humans everyday through the same type or arrogance, on a scale that none of us should be accepting. People like her belong in jail.
@@Kwanzatastix refer yourself to the Johns Hopkins study that says SYSTEMIC medical error (so where the laws and regulations are inappropriate/idiotic/in most cases so dumb they all have to know to a huge to degree) is BY FAR the number one cause of death in this country. I’m a statistician and I support that study. Thanks for asking
That is going to be one confused little duckling. First he thinks he's a duckling, then a human, then whatever that fuzzy monstrosity that my cats would probably love was & now he thinks he's a gosling. Oh well the gosling's probably think he's their mommy now too.
You're adorable, like the real-life, adult version of Charlie Brown. I admire the fact that you're transparent about your failures/mishaps and you don't give up.
My husband convinced me to get ducks because of you! We now have 33 birds altogether. 10 ducks, 21 chickens, and 2 geese! We love them all! Thank you for the videos, it has definitely helped us get our homestead started.
When you're assisting hatching don't peel/break the shell as there are still crucial blood vessels running along the membrane. If you absolutely need to, shallowly drill a small hole where you think the chick is hatching so that it can breathe but don't do anymore than that. When the chick is absolutely ready to hatch, it'll manage on its own 99% of the time.
Good morning Morgan! I am by no means an expert. I too, felt the pangs of restriction and needed to create!I have hatched quail once and have a second set in the "better" incubator. I was told that it was a mortal sin to open the incubator during lockdown because the rapid influx of cool dry air shrink wraps them in the shell with the inner membrane and they can't hatch. Maybe geese are more stalwart. So happy Allison was in the video. Sub mama duck was perfect and hysterical all at once. Thank you for being a unifying personality in the homesteading community.
Definitely cried along with Alison over losing that poor baby gosling. Farming can be hard on your heart sometimes, but you had lots of other successful hatches on the bright side! Looking forward to watching these guys and gals grow :)
Allison, you have just the sweetest heart - it shows so clearly when you're caring for your animals. I just bet you're an amazing nurse! My mom was a cardiac ICU nurse for 35 years before she retired, and she is just the same about her fur-babies, lol!
Your wife is simply the sweetest thing, I hope she didn't feel too bad, and I thank her for her work as a medical responder. Now, I hope you all are proud parents, a great job at being the mother goose.
There's nothing sweeter than a newborn sound of baby ducks and goslings and little chicks… There's so fragile and precious and hopeful and they depend on us and it's a really cool sound as well as a cool feeling..... knowing they need us as much as we need them. We're so soft and fuzzy and warm and just as ADORABLE as they can be..🐥😃😃
You tripped the Ground-Fault Circuit Interrupter (GFCI) outlet. It's like a 2nd much faster responding circuit breaker. You have a chance of surviving dropping a hair dryer into the bathtub with one.
Curious though did you trip the service breaker, the main 200 amp breaker? Because from watching your video the circuit that your gfci is on looks like a bathroom which normally it's own separate circuit breaker, 20 amp breaker normally. If your main breaker tripped you may need to take a look at your panel and double check your neutral bus.
This video nominated for an award. Life, death, hope, loss, suspense, cute goslings... It has it all. Makes me cry and smile. Lovely to seem so many comments below from people concerned about the birdie. Hope your second hatching has a even higher and cuter hit rate!
I just went to my grandmothers funeral this morning. Sad doesn't even come close to how I felt. Thank you for cheering me up with cute little baby birds
I remember when I first started hatching with one of those foam incubators! It doesn't take long b4 you want to move up, watch out! Now I have a cabinet incubator with three sets of chicken eggs, a set of turkey eggs and set off duck eggs all going. I let our goose sit on her own eggs this year so we'll see how she does. If you give those goslings to your goose she'll take care of them and you won't have to brood them at all. They're incredibly good Mothers and will adopt babies all of sorts.
Awwww I always feel so bad for Allison when animals get sick or die. She loves them so much. Also the little duckling seems like it wants to be our new mischief queen!
I love your wife. That she cares so deeply is beautiful. You said in an older video she was becoming a nurse practitioner and I can totally see that. Her patients are lucky to have her. ❤️
@GoldShawFarm hearing you and your wife talking to that 'peep peep' coming from a tiny whole in an hatching egg was so adorable! Your hearts are beautiful!!
You are so lucky to have such a sensitive and supportive wife. She almost had me in tears trying to save the undeveloped baby hatchling. Great video. Good luck I hear new parents never have enough time at first, but I can tell you guys got this. Stay safe and healthy.
Can we get an update on what the Goose/duck doing that special project for you is up too?. Also would love to see how the fluffy chickens are going again some day
I want to let you and any future hatcher know a big tip! Eggs can still hatch even if they go without heat for up to 3 days. I was incubating quail, chickens, and ducks all together in a diy incubator when my relay to the incubator stopped working. My incubator went 3 days without heat before I was able to replace the broken relay. All eggs hatched within or a few days after due dates. Development just goes dormant when heat loss.
Me: squealing in delight My husband: Are you watching that guy with the ducks again? Why do I feel like I'm going to come home someday and find ducks in the damn yard? 😂😂😂
That is called a GFCI which means, Ground Fault Circuit Interupter. I just asked my husband, he tried explaining it to me but he said, "it can be very complicated". He's been an electrician for over 30 years~ he's sitting across from me on our other couch (😁we're social distancing) while I watch your new babies hatch~ sorry for your loss but happy for all the little ones that you got.💖🐣🐣🐣💗
I love your new duckling!!! Aawww!!! I'm overwhelmed with the cuteness 😍 🦆 Also, I love the sound of their feet paddling down the ramp when you release the quacken 🤩...I love the sound of my parrot's feet when he races across the kitchen floor to get a treat. Birds are the best!😂🐦
If you don't already know that channel, you should definitely check out A Chick Called Albert. It's a sweet man who saves all sorts of birds, from hatching to running or flying around. I never touched a hatching egg, but I learned a lot simply watching his channel!
Thank you your videos have been a much needed positive distraction to the bad stuff going on. I was born and grew up in VT nice to see a younger generation continuing the farming tradition in my former home.
2:50 That's a ground fault circuit interrupter. It compares current going to and from a electrical device plugged into it. If there is a ground fault, it will cut off power. It just prevents you from getting shocked, you typically find them anywhere there is a source of water next to an outlet such as in a bathroom or kitchen.
The poor, sweet first pipper. You and Allison did the best you could. You can tell Allison is a great nurse from her care of the little pipper. (I'm going to call the gosling Pip.) Rest in peace, Pip.
Hey bud I have been watching u for years love your place I have only an acre but am raising 20 ducks 6 Roman tufted geese thank you both for all the info
Nice video! A 50% hatch rate is pretty good for that cheap incubator, I have a really high end RCOM incubator and I get about the same hatch rate. Those baby geese are so cute!
Playing catch-up by binging older videos and as soon as that duckling hatched i immediately knew it was Ron Swanson and the parks and rec crew. *I may have (definitely) screamed Awe it’s baby Ron Swanson at the screen and startled my sleeping cat awake 😳poor girl, it’s nearly 3:30am here now and she’d been trying to herd me to bed for hours.
Excellent video! For future reference try not to open the incubator when they are hatching as it can cause the sack they are in the shrink wrap onto them so then they cant get out. Its a mistake alot of people make, including myself. When their due date comes just leave them, even if they hatch all the way out you can leave them in there for a day whilst the others keep hatching, and if you have to take the hatched ones out whilst the others are hatching try not to open the lid too much and take them out quickly. I also find geese are a lot harder to hatch compared to ducks an chickens and you'll find quite a few of them will die either during hatching or just before they pip. Keep up the good work and stay safe!
You did the right thing with the little goose. I have successfully saved some by opening the eggs, but if they are not well formed there is not much that can be done. I always try to help them out eventually because I have noticed that some of them do great after a few hours of touch and go care but they wouldn't hatch on their own
We hatched ducks and geese and had them all together. When it was warm enough we let them outside in a little run that would keep them safe but allow grazing and bug eating. Our adult momma geese would come and lay beside them and talk to them and run the cats and dogs off. Eventually the whole group was let to run around the yard and the momma geese started separating the goslings from the ducklings! They totally knew the difference and the whole group adopted the goslings. The poor ducks had to manage on their own (with our help of course). Montana farm.
Thanks for the amazing look into your hatchlings. We have been in lockdown for a while in Northeast CT . Except to walk my pup.I haven't left my property since 3/18. The renewal of life and spring itself is a great respite from our current crisis. I think the little guy will imprint on you. Love you humor about who was the father LOL. As with all good things in life there is always some heartache so sorry that allison felt so sad about it . Be safe my friends and good luck with all the hatchlings
Maybe you could get some kind of an external alarm. One that will sound off on your phone or in another loud way if the temperature starts to drop below a certain point. But it needs to be separate from the incubator itself so they can't fail together.
I grew up with ducks and ducklings my entire childhood and have hatched probably hundreds of ducklings (Muscovy ducks, so we had clutches of eggs into the dozens sometimes). When they take too long getting out of the shell like that they just run out of energy and don’t make it. I’ve had some success hatching them out manually, but when the veins that are connected to the membrane inside the shell are broken before they’re ready it can lead to excessive bleeding and sometimes that can contribute to the ducklings death. I’ve had the most success when I intervened early and broke only the shell, but left the membrane intact. And it’s always a good idea to lightly pierce the membrane near the ducklings head (you can tell where it is when they start to pip) so they’re breathing as early as possible. I really felt for Alison when that little baby died in her hands. Sometimes that just how it happens. (Of course, none of this professional medical advice, just someone who had a dozen or so ducklings to care for every summer!)
hey mate, watching from Perth Australia. Cold evening here, great to see your videos. I'm a quantity surveyor but am getting into micro-greens, got my first crop running. Will do this on my farm when I see some good land going. Thanks for motivating me to start working towards my dream
@@GoldShawFarm yep, I'm actually a New Zealander living in aussie so not sure whether the farm will be here or back home? anyway, keep up the great work mate.
What an adorable little duckling but he hast to be terrified of that mock stuffed duckling you made for him it looks more like a frog and he’s probably terrified he’s gonna look like that when he grows up… Try again Morgan LOL or better yet have Allison do it ha ha Ha ha ha 😊 i’m so happy for your success in hatching the ducklings this time. I read a few of the comments below mine and they are accurate in being able to assist breaking off some of the egg if need be but also making sure you keep the lid shut as much as possible(or for as SHORT A TIME AS POSSIBLE), because that moisture is very important for Hatching the Eggs♥️♥️. My sister hatches hundreds of eggs a month. I’m really really excited for you in this new adventure. I’m also very impressed that you can tell when they hatch who the parents are…I just am not good at that… I don’t have an eye for that like you do. I just look at them and say: “SO CUTE”❣️❣️
Hey great video! Just wanted to mention if your incubator goes out for up to 24 hours do not throw out the eggs. Most eggs can handle cooling up to 24 hour. Ducks and geese may even require cooling periods depending on the breed.
My goose eggs drop temp in the incubator almost every night for a few hours from 39 to 35 and they hatch still and I use a cardboard box with a bulb and dimmer switch
The membrane dries up while the goslings are still in the egg when the humidity drops below optimal level making it like a Saran Wrap which prevents them from hatching. It’s important to keep the top down to maintain the heat and humidity. Congratulations!
The incubator has lost the heat and humidity by the time you're closing it, not keeping the eggs moist. The humidity is removed every time you leave it open, so don't remove stuck dried shell before you've addressed the humidity of it, and then feel it's softened enough to carefully remove.
I was glad to see that you opened the incubator and picked up those little babies and helped some to hatch. Look how many babies you got! How can people say it is wrong to open the 'bator when you have such hatching success? I have a very small incubator - I hatch chicken eggs. Usually only 2 or 3 out of 9 eggs would hatch, and I was following all the rules of the "authorities." But on the last batch I could see the chicks weren't drying off after they hatched - too humid! I took them out one by one over 3 days - they hatched on different days - and they dried off and fluffed up in the brooder. And now I have 5 fluffy little chicks instead of two or three. So much for the rules. Doing what works is right.
After hatching many many ducklings i can say YOU NEED TO REFRAIN yourself from opening the incubator, Duckling need more humidity then chooks so its imperative to not open the incubator from day 26 till the end of day 29 and if you still have some that are pipping dont open the incubator till day 30. some can be late bloomers, the ducklings will last for up to 48 hours from the yolk they absorb, if you have an early bird you could possibly open up incubator very fast retrieve that duckling and close the lid fast, never leave that lid open regardless. you can also add a wet sponge away from any contact of eggs on day 26 this will help rise the humidity. we all make mistakes when we start incubating, i have lost many eggs due to my mistakes when i first started but now being a breeder of ducks and chickens and Quail i have learned to just not open the incubator so the baby's dont get shrink wrapped, Dont be put off just remember what happens and take it as a learning curve, hope this reads friendly as it is friendly advice as i love to see others breeding and incubating their own stock. Margie from Australia
great video, but u do need to sit on your hands and not keep opening the incy, u keep loosing all the humidity
Also, if you have to open it for some reason (hatching or hatched bird problems), spraying the eggs with a little water right then can stop the drop in humidity from causing shrink wrapping. Just make sure its warm water
I agree with all this
Congratulations! Those are some cute babies.
I keep a spray bottle full of filtered water in the cupboard that I put the incubator in. It sits right next to the incubator keeping the water warmish. I spritz the eggs each time I open the incubator. When I need to help a duckling out of a shrink wrapped membrane, I keep a bowl of warm water with me and between dabbing the egg and dipping the egg, it's easier to get the tight membrane to release. I suspect low humidity was a problem with how the shells stuck to some of the goslings. That could effect hatch rates too. I will add to the other's comments, please avoid opening the incubator during hatch, or open quick and a light spritz and close quick if you need to help a bird or get some rowdy day olds out to stop knocking the other eggs around. Hatching is so much fun.
Yes this video was giving me massive anxiety as a tutorial to hatch eggs and seeing him shrink wrapping ducklings by repeatedly opening the incubator and leaving it open for massive lengths of time. I’ve seen this on every hatching video I’ve watched this year. People just not doing their homework. No hard feelings as I know people make mistakes but it’s still really stressful for me to watch.
If the bird isn’t hatching on his own after a long while, don’t remove the shell. There are still blood vessels between him and it you will rip. You can however press gently the shell, like the mother would by sitting on the eggs. That does help often when the bird is too weak to finish hatching on his own.
Sirin G I totally agree!!
Sirin G- I agree. I had a 400 egg Sears wet hatch cedar incubator.
Hatched hundreds of eggs with a 98% hatch rate. I would check them twice a day and hand turn the eggs. Would do that again. It was very rewarding. I enjoyed that the goslings would talk to me through the shell on the 26th day!
I'm tempted to raise Pilgrims, because they appear to be an endangered breed. I normally hatch Standard Toulouse.
Sirin G....Im here to ask help! I have 10 Sebastopol Geese eggs in the bator….I have hatched this breed for years with little problems however yesterday inoticed one of the eggs external pipping on day 25. The gosling is breaking threw the SMALL end of the shell....Ive never experienced this have you? Im concerned that this baby will not make it...its on hour 13 and although its making progress its pipping is becoming faint…..any suggestions for abackwards hatch? TYSM!
Thank you infinitely for sharing this- I was so hoping to see this exact comment.
My father learned this the hard way the chick he tried helping out ended up dying and he didn’t have the heart to tell ppl that’s how it died
Your wife has a motherly heart and I love watching her dote on all the animals. Congrats on the new hatchlings!
You can tell she makes a great nurse.
Bassem B. In Europe we have learned that animals are only creatures with four legs.This is very abusive term for all birds. It is actually very shocking hearing this primitive term.I was studying biology, it was my favorite subject. My professor will kill anybody naming birds animals. Is that what American schools are teaching?
@@liluniadomoczowski5783 Animals (also called Metazoa) are multicellular eukaryotic organisms that form the biological kingdom Animalia. All Aves are animals. Humans are animals. Insects are animals. Coral is an animal. Almost all of the large motile organisms out there are animals.
@@rogersstuart Yeah birds are definitely animals. People too.
@@builtontherockhomestead9390 she just carelessly ripped into the shell of a still-bloody baby bird while hyperventilating and you think she'd make a good nurse? Well yea, cuz nurses and doctors are the number one cause of death in this country according to a Johns Hopkins study, she's definitely on par with the rest of them!! You should be more careful before endorsing anyone as a healthcare professional. Basically anyone in the field right now should be disregarded unless they're renouncing their formal education and their peers. You're literally a genocide denier right now if you disagree with what I just said.
That little duck was kind of a butthole to the goslings. Super cute though, all of them. Poor Allison trying to save that one Gosling with the developmental defects. This channel always makes me smile, even though sometimes sad stuff happens in the farm there is always so much to bring joy, thank you guys so much for sharing so much of your lives with the world. Best wishes from Seattle, WA.
My wife who was the science teacher. Retired now, was talking back to you on screen. She has hatched eggs every spring in her classroom. She was telling you that first group was still ok.
Michael Connolly 😮🥺
Agreed
Yeah. The first group would have survived but he tossed them therefore they all died
Totally
I was wondering about that. There is a learning curve to this incubating thing, isn't there?
I know it's hard to leave them alone while they're hatching but you need to. You also need to stop helping if you see blood coming, it means it still has a few hours if not a day to go, just moisten it every few hours to make sure it doesn't dry up. I say all this from experience, it's heartbreaking cuz you wish you could help them all but have to learn somehow.
medical professionals like her kill actual humans everyday through the same type or arrogance, on a scale that none of us should be accepting. People like her belong in jail.
@@feederdiaries4862 wut?
@@Kwanzatastix refer yourself to the Johns Hopkins study that says SYSTEMIC medical error (so where the laws and regulations are inappropriate/idiotic/in most cases so dumb they all have to know to a huge to degree) is BY FAR the number one cause of death in this country. I’m a statistician and I support that study. Thanks for asking
That is going to be one confused little duckling. First he thinks he's a duckling, then a human, then whatever that fuzzy monstrosity that my cats would probably love was & now he thinks he's a gosling.
Oh well the gosling's probably think he's their mommy now too.
You're adorable, like the real-life, adult version of Charlie Brown. I admire the fact that you're transparent about your failures/mishaps and you don't give up.
My husband convinced me to get ducks because of you! We now have 33 birds altogether. 10 ducks, 21 chickens, and 2 geese! We love them all! Thank you for the videos, it has definitely helped us get our homestead started.
When you're assisting hatching don't peel/break the shell as there are still crucial blood vessels running along the membrane. If you absolutely need to, shallowly drill a small hole where you think the chick is hatching so that it can breathe but don't do anymore than that. When the chick is absolutely ready to hatch, it'll manage on its own 99% of the time.
The unfortunate part of survival of the fittest is that 1%.
Good morning Morgan! I am by no means an expert. I too, felt the pangs of restriction and needed to create!I have hatched quail once and have a second set in the "better" incubator. I was told that it was a mortal sin to open the incubator during lockdown because the rapid influx of cool dry air shrink wraps them in the shell with the inner membrane and they can't hatch. Maybe geese are more stalwart. So happy Allison was in the video. Sub mama duck was perfect and hysterical all at once. Thank you for being a unifying personality in the homesteading community.
Definitely cried along with Alison over losing that poor baby gosling. Farming can be hard on your heart sometimes, but you had lots of other successful hatches on the bright side! Looking forward to watching these guys and gals grow :)
Allison, you have just the sweetest heart - it shows so clearly when you're caring for your animals. I just bet you're an amazing nurse!
My mom was a cardiac ICU nurse for 35 years before she retired, and she is just the same about her fur-babies, lol!
Everytime you open the incubator you lower the humidity making it more difficult for the chicks to hatch. Leave them alone.
Why are people so crazy about it it’s his life yeh it’s not great but he does what he wants
@@bellasteppedonmahtoez932 He wants as many eggs to hatch as possible. Everyone does.
@@bellasteppedonmahtoez932 ok keyboard white night . It's called constructive criticism
Your wife is simply the sweetest thing, I hope she didn't feel too bad, and I thank her for her work as a medical responder. Now, I hope you all are proud parents, a great job at being the mother goose.
There's nothing sweeter than a newborn sound of baby ducks and goslings and little chicks… There's so fragile and precious and hopeful and they depend on us and it's a really cool sound as well as a cool feeling..... knowing they need us as much as we need them. We're so soft and fuzzy and warm and just as ADORABLE as they can be..🐥😃😃
Qqqyt
Lpplppl
You tripped the Ground-Fault Circuit Interrupter (GFCI) outlet. It's like a 2nd much faster responding circuit breaker. You have a chance of surviving dropping a hair dryer into the bathtub with one.
You’re so right! I knew there was a name for it. I couldn’t remember it for the life of me when I was shooting that clip.
Curious though did you trip the service breaker, the main 200 amp breaker? Because from watching your video the circuit that your gfci is on looks like a bathroom which normally it's own separate circuit breaker, 20 amp breaker normally. If your main breaker tripped you may need to take a look at your panel and double check your neutral bus.
This video nominated for an award. Life, death, hope, loss, suspense, cute goslings... It has it all. Makes me cry and smile. Lovely to seem so many comments below from people concerned about the birdie. Hope your second hatching has a even higher and cuter hit rate!
I just went to my grandmothers funeral this morning. Sad doesn't even come close to how I felt.
Thank you for cheering me up with cute little baby birds
I'm Certain she'll be watching over you now. ❤💛💙🧡💜💚
I watch this video twice I just love seeing when Ron Swanson and the parks and rec crew were born so cute.
I was watching this outside where my duck and her two babies are, and when your chick started to squeak she became very alarmed 😅
جميل
I remember when I first started hatching with one of those foam incubators! It doesn't take long b4 you want to move up, watch out! Now I have a cabinet incubator with three sets of chicken eggs, a set of turkey eggs and set off duck eggs all going. I let our goose sit on her own eggs this year so we'll see how she does.
If you give those goslings to your goose she'll take care of them and you won't have to brood them at all. They're incredibly good Mothers and will adopt babies all of sorts.
Awwww I always feel so bad for Allison when animals get sick or die. She loves them so much. Also the little duckling seems like it wants to be our new mischief queen!
Thanks, I really needed to see the cutest duckling in the world, and the progeny of Justin the demon goose!
My 8yr old granddaughter watching all ur videos old and new. She just loooove ur farm.
I love your wife. That she cares so deeply is beautiful. You said in an older video she was becoming a nurse practitioner and I can totally see that. Her patients are lucky to have her. ❤️
People who care are awesome
@GoldShawFarm hearing you and your wife talking to that 'peep peep' coming from a tiny whole in an hatching egg was so adorable! Your hearts are beautiful!!
You are so lucky to have such a sensitive and supportive wife. She almost had me in tears trying to save the undeveloped baby hatchling. Great video. Good luck I hear new parents never have enough time at first, but I can tell you guys got this. Stay safe and healthy.
The video is so nice learning about how Ron Swanson started out
I've been looking forward to this video! I got teary-eyed watching Allison try to save that gosling, though. I'm glad more of them were healthy!
Hi..... Morgan (Gold Shaw Farm). Thank you for sharing your video homestead chicken farmer garden 👋 bye 👋 bye 👋 bye 👋 👕🐔🐓🐥🐩🐈🌱🎥👍👍👍
I love her and his tenderness! Just awesome! You both Rock and your empathy is a testament to your strength!!
Imagine the "parental shock" the adult birds will get when suddenly like 10+ little birds joins their flock out of nowhere :D
Can we get an update on what the Goose/duck doing that special project for you is up too?.
Also would love to see how the fluffy chickens are going again some day
Soon on both fronts.
Is this the birth of the Parks and Reck gang? Lol.
Was looking for Gosling hatching tips. And stumbled on this one lol
I want to let you and any future hatcher know a big tip! Eggs can still hatch even if they go without heat for up to 3 days. I was incubating quail, chickens, and ducks all together in a diy incubator when my relay to the incubator stopped working. My incubator went 3 days without heat before I was able to replace the broken relay. All eggs hatched within or a few days after due dates. Development just goes dormant when heat loss.
Me: squealing in delight
My husband: Are you watching that guy with the ducks again? Why do I feel like I'm going to come home someday and find ducks in the damn yard?
😂😂😂
😂🤣😂
hahaha!! That is halious🤣🤣😂😆
hahah, but I feel like he is right
👊😎👌
😅
That is called a GFCI which means, Ground Fault Circuit Interupter. I just asked my husband, he tried explaining it to me but he said, "it can be very complicated". He's been an electrician for over 30 years~ he's sitting across from me on our other couch (😁we're social distancing) while I watch your new babies hatch~ sorry for your loss but happy for all the little ones that you got.💖🐣🐣🐣💗
This guy is the person I aspire to be more like literally everyday. Hard working and dedicated.
Thank you for showing some comic relief after the baby died because I was about to cry but the geese trying to bite you made me smile!!
Your wife is so beautiful and so unbelievably compassionate. What a lucky man you are!
I love your new duckling!!!
Aawww!!!
I'm overwhelmed with the cuteness 😍 🦆
Also, I love the sound of their feet paddling down the ramp when you release the quacken 🤩...I love the sound of my parrot's feet when he races across the kitchen floor to get a treat.
Birds are the best!😂🐦
Lovely video. Really enjoy watching your exploits over breakfast, a lovely start to the day
That's your GFI. Sorry for your loss. Definitely a learning experience!
If you don't already know that channel, you should definitely check out A Chick Called Albert. It's a sweet man who saves all sorts of birds, from hatching to running or flying around. I never touched a hatching egg, but I learned a lot simply watching his channel!
"A chick called Albert" is also a favorite of mine. Neck to neck with this one, Gold Shaw Farm
Thank you your videos have been a much needed positive distraction to the bad stuff going on. I was born and grew up in VT nice to see a younger generation continuing the farming tradition in my former home.
2:50
That's a ground fault circuit interrupter.
It compares current going to and from a electrical device plugged into it. If there is a ground fault, it will cut off power. It just prevents you from getting shocked, you typically find them anywhere there is a source of water next to an outlet such as in a bathroom or kitchen.
Omg Allison crying about the hatchling almost had me crying 🥺😭 she seems so sweet 🥺
Such cute little birds. Wish there were more ducklings. Beautiful birthing process. 😺💖 Thanks for sharing.
Love the names,,,, ur sooo talented, humorous n compassionate.
I'm absolutely in love with this! I am almost half convinced that I'm going to ask the Director of our school if we can do this with our kids soon.
Oh. My. Heart! Your wife is such a sweetie. She had me crying too! Poor baby gosling. 😞 But, YAY for such a good hatch rate! ❤
Very cute and so rewarding. You'll either have 11 geese following their oldest sib and thinking they're ducks or one duck thinking their a goose
The tip about using the chick feeder for water instead of starter was excellent and I will be doing that next clutch we receive . Thank you !
You tripped the GFI (the type of plug with the buttons that work like a secondary breaker) ♡ I love your content and how much you care
The poor, sweet first pipper. You and Allison did the best you could. You can tell Allison is a great nurse from her care of the little pipper. (I'm going to call the gosling Pip.)
Rest in peace, Pip.
Hey bud I have been watching u for years love your place I have only an acre but am raising 20 ducks 6 Roman tufted geese thank you both for all the info
Nice video! A 50% hatch rate is pretty good for that cheap incubator, I have a really high end RCOM incubator and I get about the same hatch rate. Those baby geese are so cute!
Playing catch-up by binging older videos and as soon as that duckling hatched i immediately knew it was Ron Swanson and the parks and rec crew.
*I may have (definitely) screamed Awe it’s baby Ron Swanson at the screen and startled my sleeping cat awake 😳poor girl, it’s nearly 3:30am here now and she’d been trying to herd me to bed for hours.
Excellent video! For future reference try not to open the incubator when they are hatching as it can cause the sack they are in the shrink wrap onto them so then they cant get out. Its a mistake alot of people make, including myself. When their due date comes just leave them, even if they hatch all the way out you can leave them in there for a day whilst the others keep hatching, and if you have to take the hatched ones out whilst the others are hatching try not to open the lid too much and take them out quickly. I also find geese are a lot harder to hatch compared to ducks an chickens and you'll find quite a few of them will die either during hatching or just before they pip. Keep up the good work and stay safe!
You did the right thing with the little goose. I have successfully saved some by opening the eggs, but if they are not well formed there is not much that can be done. I always try to help them out eventually because I have noticed that some of them do great after a few hours of touch and go care but they wouldn't hatch on their own
We hatched ducks and geese and had them all together. When it was warm enough we let them outside in a little run that would keep them safe but allow grazing and bug eating. Our adult momma geese would come and lay beside them and talk to them and run the cats and dogs off. Eventually the whole group was let to run around the yard and the momma geese started separating the goslings from the ducklings! They totally knew the difference and the whole group adopted the goslings. The poor ducks had to manage on their own (with our help of course). Montana farm.
Amazing!!!! I din't know that!!! The geese are so smart!!!
@Awesome Foxes
ur birds are superstars in my family. love ur videos!
Awwww! Sweet babies
The outlet in the bathroom is a GFI or ground fault interrupter. It's a very sensitive device meant to protect you.
You should record a bit of the ducks and geese quacking/honking and play for the new babies. They seem to want to hear it.
Thanks for the amazing look into your hatchlings. We have been in lockdown for a while in Northeast CT . Except to walk my pup.I haven't left my property since 3/18. The renewal of life and spring itself is a great respite from our current crisis. I think the little guy will imprint on you. Love you humor about who was the father LOL. As with all good things in life there is always some heartache so sorry that allison felt so sad about it . Be safe my friends and good luck with all the hatchlings
Omg you guys are so great
I'm also a nurse and you can't just see the love in Allyson
You’re wife is a gem, treasure her!
You two are the best types of souls out there. We need more people like you in the world.
Maybe you could get some kind of an external alarm. One that will sound off on your phone or in another loud way if the temperature starts to drop below a certain point.
But it needs to be separate from the incubator itself so they can't fail together.
Could you perhaps put the little chicks with bernie chicken?
Because i think that those fluffy kind of chickens are the most peacefull ones
Until it goes full Raptor when you least expect it.
Wouldnt she kill them?
Such an accidentally wonderful project for all your quarantine and working from home time!
Not an accident - because you obviously meant to hatch a bunch of eggs, but accidentally more meaningful in light of what’s going on!
Had some difficult talks today but this flamed my heart right back up. Whenever I get the possibility I will hatch myself some ducklings.
I grew up with ducks and ducklings my entire childhood and have hatched probably hundreds of ducklings (Muscovy ducks, so we had clutches of eggs into the dozens sometimes). When they take too long getting out of the shell like that they just run out of energy and don’t make it. I’ve had some success hatching them out manually, but when the veins that are connected to the membrane inside the shell are broken before they’re ready it can lead to excessive bleeding and sometimes that can contribute to the ducklings death. I’ve had the most success when I intervened early and broke only the shell, but left the membrane intact. And it’s always a good idea to lightly pierce the membrane near the ducklings head (you can tell where it is when they start to pip) so they’re breathing as early as possible. I really felt for Alison when that little baby died in her hands. Sometimes that just how it happens. (Of course, none of this professional medical advice, just someone who had a dozen or so ducklings to care for every summer!)
Allison is some kind of angel.
save all the shells, dry them, then sun-bake them to grind it up as a source of calcium for other laying birds.
hey mate, watching from Perth Australia. Cold evening here, great to see your videos. I'm a quantity surveyor but am getting into micro-greens, got my first crop running. Will do this on my farm when I see some good land going. Thanks for motivating me to start working towards my dream
Sounds great!
@@GoldShawFarm yep, I'm actually a New Zealander living in aussie so not sure whether the farm will be here or back home? anyway, keep up the great work mate.
Congratulatoins! Its wonderful watching the duckling first arrive. Wow!
Thank you so much!
This channels getting me through the lockdown!!!
What an adorable little duckling but he hast to be terrified of that mock stuffed duckling you made for him it looks more like a frog and he’s probably terrified he’s gonna look like that when he grows up… Try again Morgan LOL or better yet have Allison do it ha ha Ha ha ha 😊 i’m so happy for your success in hatching the ducklings this time. I read a few of the comments below mine and they are accurate in being able to assist breaking off some of the egg if need be but also making sure you keep the lid shut as much as possible(or for as SHORT A TIME AS POSSIBLE), because that moisture is very important for Hatching the Eggs♥️♥️. My sister hatches hundreds of eggs a month. I’m really really excited for you in this new adventure. I’m also very impressed that you can tell when they hatch who the parents are…I just am not good at that… I don’t have an eye for that like you do. I just look at them and say: “SO CUTE”❣️❣️
Is this Ron Swanson with the Parks & Recreations crew?? Omg 😻 it is!
Hey great video I really enjoy your vids man I hope you keep up the good videos and lots of luck all the way from New Zealand :)
Thank you!
That Jerry Springer reference was absolutely awesome!
It's a gfci... Ground fault circuit interrupter, or something like that. Love your videos! ☺️
Have you ever tried a heating plate rather than the lamps with the ducks? Curious if they work with ducks like the do with chicks.
Hey great video! Just wanted to mention if your incubator goes out for up to 24 hours do not throw out the eggs. Most eggs can handle cooling up to 24 hour. Ducks and geese may even require cooling periods depending on the breed.
My goose eggs drop temp in the incubator almost every night for a few hours from 39 to 35 and they hatch still and I use a cardboard box with a bulb and dimmer switch
The membrane dries up while the goslings are still in the egg when the humidity drops below optimal level making it like a Saran Wrap which prevents them from hatching. It’s important to keep the top down to maintain the heat and humidity.
Congratulations!
youre a cool dude, you live a cool life. thanks for sharing your life with us.
That is a good idea on the waterer!
The incubator has lost the heat and humidity by the time you're closing it, not keeping the eggs moist. The humidity is removed every time you leave it open, so don't remove stuck dried shell before you've addressed the humidity of it, and then feel it's softened enough to carefully remove.
I was glad to see that you opened the incubator and picked up those little babies and helped some to hatch. Look how many babies you got! How can people say it is wrong to open the 'bator when you have such hatching success? I have a very small incubator - I hatch chicken eggs. Usually only 2 or 3 out of 9 eggs would hatch, and I was following all the rules of the "authorities." But on the last batch I could see the chicks weren't drying off after they hatched - too humid! I took them out one by one over 3 days - they hatched on different days - and they dried off and fluffed up in the brooder. And now I have 5 fluffy little chicks instead of two or three. So much for the rules. Doing what works is right.
Just because you got it to work doesn't mean it is good to do.
I highly recommend an incubator that auto turns!! You will get a much higher hatch rate :) great video
Me I'll get an early start on my morning, Gold Shaw post a 25 min video. Well shit I guess it's a later start than
hahhahaha
a weekly update on the growth stage of those ducklings and gosling would be a great way to pass the time during quarantine... Pls a need this ಥ‿ಥ
Your wife is so cute and loving. She loves those babies.
i love watching your videos you have inspired me so much after watching this video i wanted to hatch out my own
Let the Barn Cats be Babysitters LOL You could do a video on that !!
I felt her pain when the little one didn’t make it 😢 beautiful job on all your feathered friends ❤️💞
That plug is a GFCI (Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter) outlet. It may be connected to the same breaker that you were using outside.