We monitor eggs very closely at the Incubation Research Station at Birdworld and have found some interesting results. The incubation rooms were developed to be user friendly. The building is well insulated and air conditioned to a constant 70 F. (21 C.) dehumidified which allows us to have incubators running at a very low humidity if required. All incubators are monitored via a computer and any temperature problems will set off an alarm during the day and at night a digital communicator will phone me up. All this gives us a very stable and easy to use environment do continue our incubation research. We regularly take in eggs from aviculturalists who can't hatch them, and once the problem is found via close monitoring the information can be passed on so
they can hatch their own eggs out. Because of this work I am often called to design incubation rooms and work as a incubation consultant. At moment I am doing work in Portugal, Morocco and Russia as well as England..