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#poultry

2 APIs con questa etichetta

Egg Incubation API

Egg-incubation maths as an API, computed locally and deterministically — the hatch timeline, conditions and brooder numbers a hatchery or backyard chicken-keeper raises a clutch by. The hatch endpoint turns the set day (day 0) into the schedule by species: it knows the incubation period — chicken 21 days, duck 28, quail 17, goose 30, turkey 28, Muscovy 35 and more — and gives the lockdown day, about three days before hatch, when you stop turning the eggs, raise the humidity and leave the lid shut; pass a custom incubation_days for anything else. The conditions endpoint gives the targets: a forced-air incubator at 99.5 °F (still-air a degree or two higher at the top of the eggs), with humidity around 45–55 % through incubation and 65–75 % at lockdown so the membrane stays soft. The brooder endpoint schedules the chicks after they hatch — 95 °F under the lamp in week one, dropping 5 °F a week until they reach room temperature around 70 °F and are feathered enough to leave it. Everything is computed locally and deterministically, so it is instant and private. Ideal for poultry, hatchery, homesteading and farm app developers, incubation-timer and brooder tools, and 4-H / education software. Pure local computation — no key, no third-party service, instant. Guidance — candle the eggs and watch the chicks. Live, nothing stored. 3 compute endpoints.

api.oanor.com/incubation-api

Chicken Coop API

Backyard-chicken housing maths as an API, computed locally and deterministically — the coop, run and fixture numbers a flock keeper builds to. The space endpoint sizes the housing from the flock and the breed: about 4 ft² of coop floor per standard hen (2 for bantams, 5 for heavy breeds) plus roughly 10 ft² of run each, so ten standard hens want a 40 ft² coop and a 100 ft² run — and given a coop width it returns the length, or zero run for birds that free-range and only roost inside. The fixtures endpoint covers the inside: one nest box per three to four hens (they share and queue, so ten hens need three), 8–12 inches of roost bar per bird (ten birds ≈ 8.3 feet), about 4 inches of linear feeder space each, and a waterer per eight or so birds. Crowding is the root of pecking, disease and mess, so every figure rounds up and more space is always better; roosts should sit higher than the nest boxes so the birds don’t sleep — and soil — in them. Everything is computed locally and deterministically, so it is instant and private. Ideal for homesteading, backyard-poultry, farm and smallholding app developers, coop-planner and flock-management tools, and self-sufficiency software. Pure local computation — no key, no third-party service, instant. US units, rules of thumb. Live, nothing stored. 2 compute endpoints. For feed quantities use a different API.

api.oanor.com/chickencoop-api