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Rhode Island Red

Rhode Island Reds are one of the most popular and oldest known breeds of chicken and was developed mainly in Rhode Island and Massachusetts in the mid 1840's.

General Information

Breed Purpose
Dual Purpose
Comb
Single
Broodiness
Seldom
Climate Tolerance
Cold
Egg Productivity
High
Egg Size
Large
Egg Color
Brown
Breed Temperament
Friendly, Easily handled, Calm,
Breed Colors/Varieties
The Rhode Island Red is only recognised in Red.
Breed Size
Large Fowl
APA/ABA Class
American
Color
Red or white
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Most often when one thinks of Rhode Island Red they are thinking of the Large Fowl Rhode Island Red, as it is one of the oldest known breeds of chicken and was developed mainly in Rhode Island and Massachusetts in the mid 1840's. The first birds were bred in Little Compton, RI with the use of a Black Breasted Red Malay cock who was imported from England. This Rooster can actually still be seen on display in the Smithsonian Institution as the father of the breed.

The breed was accepted into the American Poultry Association in 1904.

The breed was developed to withstand the harsh New England winters and be a very hardy bird who produced hens with excellent large egg yields and who also would dress out well and look nice on the table, a true dual purpose bird. While the names and places of origin are the same, the Rhode Island White is actually a distinct breed separate from the Rhode Island Red per the American Poultry Association and will be featured in another Breed Focus thread.

The Rhode Island Red breed comes in both large fowl and bantam size and and single as well as rose comb varieties can be found readily.

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Rhode Island Red eggs

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Rhode Island Red chicks

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Rhode Island Red rooster

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Rhode Island Red juvenile

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Rhode Island Red hen

For more info on Rhode Island Reds and their owners' and breeders' experiences with them, see our breed discussion here:

https://www.backyardchickens.com/threads/chicken-breed-focus-rhode-island-red.1021447/

Latest reviews

Pros: Great for eggs and meat
Stereotypical roos
Very pretty
Not very broody
Cons: Males are kind of aggressive
Great birds! The roos are very pretty and the hens are very sweet.
These are the birds you think of when you think of a rooster.
Great review, love it, good job!
Pros: Friendly
Easy to hold
Good laying production
Cons: Scaredy
RIRs are a very good laying breed and I would highly recommend them for eggs. They can also be mean to the other chickens.
Pros: Good layers

Friendly ( most times )
Cons: Can be VERY agressive

Broody often
I have four RIR hens. they are good layers most times, however they go broody often in my flock. Three of my four hens are friendly and social, but nugget, the mean one acted very agressivly to me and is a bully to Mary Poopins and fuzzy.
Purchase Price
Free ( from neighbors )
Purchase Date
2022

Comments

I have 3 and they are all different. One is very aggressive,but to me in a funny way. She is also friendly. They other 2 just normal. I mean they don't have anything that jumps out of being bad or good. They get along with the other 14 plus the other 16 when I let them out to graze and enjoy the world.
 
My reds do not really like being handled. I have held them alot from 1wk old and spend alot of time with them but when it comes to me handling them they are not having it. Now at sundown now appox 7:50 pm they want to be all over me i think if i slept in a lounge chair in coop/pen area they would probably sleep on me all night. I dont get them. Smh
 
My RIR and Danish Brown are the same age. My friend bought two for herself as well as mine from C& J Feed Barn in Yucca Valley at a week old.

The RIR has always been a quite bird but did bully the Brown as pullets. Brown is very vocal and has been laying for a month and has been allowing me to handle her. Red 'sister' at friends started laying last week 22 weeks old. Mine not yet.

She doesn't like to be handled any more and now the brown is the dominant one. She is also very protective of the red. If I am handling the red she tries to interfere especially if red is distressed. I also think it may be similar to interfering with the attention of a rooster towards a different hen.

I made a great choice and am very pleased with her. Just getting a little tired of twiddling my thumbs while waiting on eggs.
 
I have 2 RIR hens (Ginger & Ruby). They are VERY aggressive when the bag of mealworms comes out! Ginger lays a very light brown almost-spherical egg, Ruby lays a more oval medium-brown egg. They're both 6mos old & very entertaining. Ginger will fall asleep if I put her in my lap and stroke her throat gently.
 
Mine are just about nine weeks old. One is a male and the others are females. They seem to get along just fine and allow me to come near and pick them up. I have a Cinnamon Queen hen. That is produced from breeding a RIR and White RIR. I think they would make a great starter flock.
 
Today we lost our RIR pullet Rosie ... yesterday and the day before our 20 lbs Eastern Wild turkey tom Houdini decided to try and mate her (He went to freezer camp early as he is for Christmas) After getting Rosie warm and dry she seemed to come back very well then this morning she was in the run dead. Not sure if one of the Roos stressed her or latent Turkey stress. She was 6 months old and had not started laying yet.
Now we have 2 RIR cockerels (6 months old) and no RIR hen.
 
This is my first RIRs. My RIR are 13 weeks old this sunday and monday. I was certain one is a male and two are females, but the tail feathers on the two females are curving down, and the male does not. Is this normal for RIR?

The reason I think they are one male and two females is because the male has a big comb and waddles. The females still show no significant development for their comb.
 

Item information

Category
Chicken Breeds
Added by
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Reviews
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