Most likely not, an egg of any animal has to maintain a certain temperature to hatch. Peacock eggs also have to keep a certain level of humidity to hatch.
No, the majority of chicken eggs are not fertilised
The dutch bantam lays more than an average large fowl. (At 270 a year plus.) But is still one of the smallest. The rhode island red bantam is large, so should lay large eggs.
Sometimes they hatch days apart. You can hold it up to your ear and hear it peeping or clicking if it is going to hatch.
A capon chicken is any male chicken that has been castrated. Whatever the breed is will determine the eventual size of the bird. A caponized bantam rooster will still be small when full grown.
yes it can
It is usually the chicks that do hatch that deal with this problem, they will push the egg out of the nest.
no it needs to sit on the egg or eggs for 34 days. You are partially correct -- an egg cannot sit ignored and still hatch -- but it 21 days, not 34.
To help a chicken egg hatch, ensure proper temperature and humidity in the incubator. Keep the egg still during the hatching process, and resist the urge to assist the chick in hatching as it can cause harm. Provide a warm and quiet environment for the chick to hatch naturally.
If you can hatch a regular egg in there then you can hatch an ostrich egg.
Bantam is the term used for the smaller varieties of standard size chickens. For example there are standard or "regular" sizes Wyandottes and there are the smaller Wyandott bantams. As they are still chickens, the term "chick" is used for babies of both standard and bantam sized young. Young females are called pullets and young males called cockerels.
No, they have to be kept warm to hatch.
no because it has to be warm to hatch:)