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Australorp

The Australorp Breed was developed in Australia at the end of the nineteenth century with Black...

General Information

Breed Purpose
Dual Purpose
Comb
Single
Broodiness
Average
Climate Tolerance
All Climates
Egg Productivity
High
Egg Size
Large
Egg Color
Brown
Breed Temperament
Friendly, Easily handled, Calm, Bears confinement well, Quiet, Docile
Breed Colors/Varieties
Black, Blue and White are recognised in the Australian Poultry Standards
Breed Size
Large Fowl
APA/ABA Class
English
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The Australorp is an Australian breed which was developed from Black Orpingtons imported into Australia starting around 1890. The egg laying ability of the Orpingtons was emphasized by the Australian breeders, and other breeds including Minorca, Leghorns, and Langshans were bred into the lines to increase egg production and decrease broodiness. The result was a bird with exceptional egg laying ability. They were popular entries in egg laying contests in the day and for years Australorps held many of the world egg laying records, one hen famously laying 364 eggs in 365 days.

These "Australian Black Orpingtons" were given the name Australorp around 1920. Australorps were exported in the US and England in the 1920’s, where they were an immediate hit because of their great egg laying ability, and they remain a very popular breed to this day.

Australorps are a medium sized breed. The APA recognises only one color, the original Black, but there are several other colors developed by breeders, including Blue and White, which is recognized in Australia.

They tend to be calm, docile, fairly quiet birds, with nice temperaments and they make good pets. The roosters are generally good natured. They are dependable winter layers of big brown eggs, fairly heat tolerant despite the usually black feathers, and quite cold hardy. They generally do not fly well and take well to confinement. The hens will occasionally go broody and make good mothers. They are very popular with backyard flock owners looking for a friendly productive brown egg layer, and small flock owners looking for a duel purpose breed with hens that have excellent laying ability.

It was recognized by the APA in 1929 and it is on The Livestock Conservancy's Recovering list.

First egg laid by an Australorp pullet:
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A male and female Australorp, aged 11 weeks:
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Australorp rooster:

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Australorp hen:
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For more on this breed and owners' experiences, likes and dislikes, see our breed discussion here:

https://www.backyardchickens.com/threads/chicken-breed-focus-australorp.988347/

Latest reviews

Pros: Very sweet
Good with other chickens
Good for a showbird
Cons: None
I have one black australorp named Phyllis, went broody in the summer of 2023, was a great mom. Gets along great with other chickens, rooster loves her.
Purchase Price
$4.00
Purchase Date
March 2019
Pros: Calm
Easy to handle
Cons: Can be mean to other chickens.
They are very easy to handle, very calm and are good layers.
Pros: Chatty, social, excellent layers, beautiful plumage, docile
Cons: They eat a lot, can be *too docile* that they get bullied
Love my girls. Incredibly consistent layers, and one leaves double yolkers every second day.

Attachments

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My2GirlsRanch
My2GirlsRanch
They are beautiful 🤩

Comments

maybe i got some sour ones but at least the one rooster ausi welll he knows what he is doing, unlike 1 of my other roosters unknown brred
 
Maybe it's because mine is a pullet. I named her Aretha and, as top of the pecking order, she gets plenty of R-E-S-P-E-C-T !!
 
Eggs in 16 weeks? Not my girls. We will join the "19 1/2 weeks and no eggs yet" forum this week. Not that I'm complaining, I didn't expect eggs from any of the 6 breeds until 5 months at the earliest.
 
I'm sorry, friend, that should so say 19 weeks!
Don't be discouraged. They will be laying very soon. BAs mature quite early (mine not in 16 weeks, but by 20, always!). Eggs are on their way!
 
Sorry to hear about your loss. We love our Australorps, too. One of our six is named Karla, and she polices the surrounding area while the rest are having a snack. She tries to keep the Buffs and SLW's away from the goodies!
 
The more I hear about Australorps the more i want some, I am hoping to get some hatching eggs in the spring and let my bantams hatch so chicks.
 
You mention the Aussie eggs getting bigger with maturity? That's the only complaint I have is that my eggs are mediums. They've been laying for maybe 2 months. Will the eggs get bigger?
 
We have 5 Australorps. They are all easy to handle and the smallest one comes up to us everyday to be held and petted. They all lay well and the only bully we had was a Buff Orp going after an Australorp and so she was sent down the road to a friend and now the group of 15 is doing well. So I think it is your individual chicken, maybe the "pecking order thing". Please try another couple of Australorps. Our "Blacky" is sweet as they come.
 
I have 2 green lorps (wish I had some lavender ones too), and they are not loud at all. They haven't started laying yet at 5.5 months so not sure if they'll cackle after laying or not. Most chickens though will cackle a little after laying.They are very inquisitive and have awesome personalities. They come up to the patio door and even knock on it just like my Red Stars do. One named Bea is the boss of the others. She's also the biggest chick. I have a couple that holler because they can't see the rest of the flock when they stray off a ways. It's not the Lorps though so I give them a thumbs up for quiet so far. Mine are definitely not lap chickens though. They might eventually. I might get a couple more lorps anyway after my other two are full grown and I can gauge how they really will be as adults. Hope they withstand the San Joaquin Valley heat this summer.
 
I also did 6 months of research on breeds and wanted quiet, less broody, large egg high volume layers. My girls aren't laying yet but they are super quiet so far. I was told that without a rooster they are seldom broody. Mine did not go into early molt with cooler weather like one of my Red Stars did her first year. Loved my Stars but one started hollering constantly so I found her a home and then a 2nd one started hollering every time the 3rd one was on the nest so I gave both of them to the same ladies that I gave the 1st one to. My Golden Buffs holler when they stray from the flock too and can't see the others so I have a feeling my lorps will be the only chicks left in my yard and then I'll get more of them! haha They follow me around like pups but they do not lap sit. But I'm usually not sitting when I'm outside either. Ha!
 
I find that I don't even need much sun to see the green sheen on my 2 aussies, even so, nothing wrong with black feathers! They are even more beautiful than my red sex-links with their red/white blends. Now white chickens, where's the fun in those! haha
 
I think the friendly/non-friendly aspect has to do with how much time you spend with them as babies as well as throughout their juvenile stages. Mine follow me around like puppies but they don't willingly let me pick them up. I have to make them squat before picking them up but they don't seem to ruffle feathers when I put them back down like my other chicks do. Mine are 23 weeks old and not laying yet so expecting some eggs soon, however they may delay due to the cooler temps. Not sure.
 
I like my hens also. Australorps and Wyandottes but have 2 Ausie roosters. One will be dinner soon. They all lay like crazy. I have 3 nests in vertical direction. They weren't using the bottom two and finally some did the 2nd down. I put a feeder in front of the bottom one and one day found a chicken in it with 34 eggs!!! I boiled them and think they couldn't have been over 2 weeks old. I now ck that nest too.
I love to watch them. They run in a pack. One Wyandotte goes off by herself tho ' and I wonder if she isn't retarded!
 
My Aussies were quiet except for constant chatter (not loud though) until they started laying eggs and boy did they start up a ruckus and on top of that got most of the Golden Buffs started hollering and that's before she was even on the nest. Once she was on the nest laying, she was quiet but in a moment of frustration from the racket, I got upset and gave all 6 of my girls away including the coop. My mom convinced me to try RIR bantams so I am probably going to do that so now I'm going to buy a large doghouse and turn that into a coop since it's cheaper than an actual coop and almost as cheap to build. I hope I wasn't too rash in giving away my other girls after just 1 day of 2 hour ruckus but city dwelling sucks sometimes because you get afraid the neighbors will call the cops about noise levels.
 

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Category
Chicken Breeds
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