Use a heating pad, and keep it on low. Cover the heating pad with a towel. the eggs should be turned over on the opposite side twice a day. once when you wake up and once when you go to bed.
An incubator.
Put it in a box or enclosed cage with a very powerful lamp.
Well, you HAVE to put them in an incubator or they won't survive. An incubator keeps them warm, I suppose that you could MAYBE do something to keep them warm, but I doubt it.
they use their stomachs as an incubator to keep the eggs warm enough to hatch properly without defects.
They make a nest and lay them their. Then they need to keep them warm so they sit on them. In captivity it is easier to probably get an incubator to keep them warm, but if they get cold they will dye.
incubator which is like a hen sitting on the eggs and the incubator keep the eggs nice and warm and moves them like a mama hen would do but a incubator cost a lot of money
Babies are put into a machine called an incubator, which provides heat controlled by a thermostat since babies can't keep themselves warm without help.
You keep your baby chick in an incubator or warm room to keep it warm. You put its food in a dish. You put marbles in the dish. It will peck at the shiny marbles and will get the food. That way it learns how to eat. You also give it water.
it migrates in winter, and it's heavy amounts of down help it keep warm in the cold parts of summer.
To cast a light so that we can see in the dark. To warm an incubator used to hatch chicken eggs, or keep sick animals warm.
Depending on what the objects are there are a variety of ways to keep things warm. These ways include: fire, electric/gas/propane heater, blankets, electric blankets, jackets, body heat, and an incubator.
To hatch eggs at home without an incubator, you can try using a broody hen or creating a makeshift incubator using a warm, stable environment like a box with a heat source. Make sure to monitor the temperature and humidity levels closely to increase the chances of successful hatching.