ClickBank Marketplace information
Website URL: www.incubatormaker.com
Active since: Thursday, April 12, 2012
ClickBank Marketplace Title:Incubator Maker ~ Hatch Chicken, Quail, Ducks & More
ClickBank Marketplace Description:Incubator Maker ~ How To Build A High Quality Egg Hatching Incubator Cheaply With Step-by-step Videos ~ New Niche With High Conversions ~ Great For Chicken Coop Lists
Category name: Entertaining
Site META information
Website META Keywords:Incubator Maker ~ Hatch Chicken, Quail, Ducks & More
Website META Title:Incubator Maker - How to Make a High-Quality, High-Hatching-Rate Incubator with Cheap Parts!
Website META Description:Incubator Maker ~ How To Build A High Quality Egg Hatching Incubator Cheaply With Step-by-step Videos ~ New Niche With High Conversions ~ Great For Chicken Coop Lists
Page Body Text
“How to Make a High-Quality, High-Hatching-Rate Incubator with Cheap Parts...Quickly and Easily”
Dear Friend,
Have you been looking for an inexpensive way to build a high quality egg incubator that's guaranteed to yield a high hatching rate?...
Like those high-end, expensive incubators used by professional hatcheries? If yes, then you've come to the right place.
But first, tell me if I get this right..
Most likely... .
You've purchased incubators before, but to your disappointment, the hatching rate was low to say the least.
You've been told that to achieve a high hatching rate you need to buy an expensive incubator, but you don't want to spend hundreds or even thousands of dollars on an high-end incubator.
You're tired of incubators that only get a few hatches before starting to fall apart.
You're bored to death of having to turn eggs 3 or more times a day for the entire incubation period.
You're afraid to eat market poultry because "Only God knows what's been injected, fed, or stuffed into them," and you want to take the safety of what you put in your mouth... into your own hands.
I just wanted to show how to hatch chickens to my students, but it wasn't that easy...
Let me tell you something about myself. I've been a high school science teacher for over 20 years.
One day I came up with the idea of showing my class how to hatch chickens in an incubator. I bought a small still-air incubator for $150. It was nothing fancy, just a basic unit with a thermostat.
I took it to my class, and put it to the test with a dozen chicken eggs...
Everyone was looking forward to see the chicks hatch!
I followed the directions provided to the letter. I watched... and waited... and watched... and waited...
Finally, something moved in the box! Two chicks hatched
My students and I jumped with joy!
Sadly, the excitement quickly turned into disappointment. The two chicks were the only ones that hatched out of... 12. Which is an abysmally low hatching rate of just 17%!
Even worst, they both died a few days later, probably because the conditions at which they hatched were not optimal...
Determined not to give up, I bought another incubator; a Brinsea Fully Automatic Incubator.
At $489 plus shipping, it wasn't cheap, but I had to show my students that hatching chickens at home could be done.
While the Brinsea incubator was much easier to use, the hatch was far from a success and it turned out to be yet another disappointment.
Hatcheries' Incubators include advanced humidity control systems and automatic egg turners
Not to be outdone, I started asking around about incubators used by hatcheries.
What I found was that hatcheries use incubators with advanced humidity control systems as well as egg turners.
These are key features to increase the hatching rates.
Typical Hatchery Incubator
The only problem was that the cheapest would cost me over $1,500!!! Far more than I wanted to spend on an incubator for a school project.
But I didn't give up and I told my students that I was looking for a way to make an incubator myself.
At that point, a student told me that his neighbor is well known for building incubators.
Upon hearing that I had to learn more. The next day, my student took me to meet his neighbor.
The man explained that he worked for a large incubator manufacturing company. He also explained that it was pretty easy to make high-hatching incubators with common cheap parts...
He also told us that incubator manufacturers knowingly make poorly built incubators that result in low hatching rates... "Otherwise, there would be no use in buying the more expensive models."
A 95% Hatching Rate Incubator; built of common parts from any local hardware store!
His incubators, on the other hand, were made with parts that can be bought at any local hardware store.
He sent me home with a few instructions on how to make one myself. On the way home, I stopped to pick up the supplies, which were surprisingly cheap.
That same evening, I built my incubator. Yes, i