May 28, 2024

VIDEO: Son Learning HOW to Incubate Eggs/Teaching My Sons #7


Time for Gabriel to learn about egg incubation! For this project, he chose his quail & a favorite hen’s eggs to go through the process! Come along for the fun!
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22 thoughts on “VIDEO: Son Learning HOW to Incubate Eggs/Teaching My Sons #7

  1. I’m love seeing Gabriel's cute reactions. I’m predicting his personality will come through more and more as these videos progress. He'll be doing videos of his own someday. So much of you and James in every expression. Thank you for sharing him.

  2. Good seeing u again Gabriel I bet you have had this lesson many times . I appreciate you and your mom doing this for folks that don't know much about incubator or incubation of eggs . Thank u have a great day .

  3. Gabriel has such a gentle hand with the eggs. I noticed that with the bread making video too. Good teachers make good students, and vice versa. TFS and God bless.

  4. Great teaching! Gabriel will surely do well.
    I'm Canadian. I learned with Fahrenheit but then we began using Celsius. Can be confusing, for sure. Perhaps the Magic Fly is set to 38*C because that is 100.4*F
    37.5*C is 99.5*F

  5. I'm going to be 67 soon have never incubated eggs have never had a chicken or a quail or anything else like that only larger animals when I was little on the farm BUT I want to learn ride along with Gabriel crazy times crazy things happen things might need to be different at our house even though we've got a very small space he said quail don't take too many much bless you and Gabriel with your teaching experiences they are my learning experiences

  6. Good job Gabe! Put up with your mom, she will teach you alot that you will cherish years down the road. I have started gardening and raising rabbits this year do to this crazy world and trying to show my grown daughters how to survive when need be. Wish I would have done it at your age:)

  7. Love this! Gabriel, you are going to do a great job! I did “baby chick hatching” each spring with my second graders for MANY years. We always got our incubators and eggs from the County Extension Service. Our incubators were made from styrofoam with a small little window on top so we could view our eggs and baby chicks. After keeping a record of the temperature in the incubator for two or three days and keeping it moist, or slightly humid inside, a lady brought us a dozen eggs. We usually had three or four different kinds of eggs; later, chicks!

    The boys and girls got so excited when we marked the eggs with the x and o system! They always reminded me when it was time to turn our eggs, as they got to take turns helping! When the pipping started, the kiddos could hardly contain themselves! Seeing those baby chicks come out of the shells, as they took turns watching through the little window, made for perfect snapshots of my students! We got to keep the chicks until there were signs of little feathers on their wings! The students were sad to say goodbye to them on the day I had to take them to the fairgrounds after school. My mother also let me help her with getting eggs ready for hatching. I grew up on a farm in the ‘50s and ‘60s! We had NO electric incubators, of course. We gave the job to “setting hens”! We always bought extra baby chicks in town, where a man had a large hatchery. Good luck with your baby “birds”, Gabriel. Looking forward to their hatching and a video!

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