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Orpington

The original Orpington, the Black, was developed in England in 1886 and brought to the US in...

General Information

Breed Purpose
Dual Purpose
Comb
Single
Broodiness
Frequent
Climate Tolerance
All Climates
Egg Productivity
Medium
Egg Size
Large
Egg Color
Light Brown
Breed Temperament
Friendly, Easily handled, Calm, Bears confinement well, Quiet, Docile
Breed Colors/Varieties
USA APA: Buff, Black, White, BlueSplash in not recognized at this time.Also there are a few other colors of Orpington Projects under way in the USA as of today.
Breed Size
Large Fowl
APA/ABA Class
English
Color
The original breed colours/varieties are black, white, buff, blue and splash
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The popular Orpington breed originated from the town of Orpington, Kent, in south-east England, where the original black Orpington was bred by William Cook in 1886. (Mr Cook also created the Orpington duck breed). Mr Cook crossed Minorcas, Langshans and Plymouth Rocks to create a new hybrid breed, from which he selected to breed a black bird, that would also exhibit well, by hiding the dirt and soot of London.
The breed was shown in Madison Square Gardens in 1895 and its popularity soared. Its large size and soft appearance together with its beautiful colours make it very attractive breed and as such its popularity has grown as a show bird rather than a utility breed. Hens are fairly often broody and are good mothers. Although rather heavy, they are able to fly small distances but rarely do so.
The original breed colours/varieties are black, white, buff, blue and splash. Although there are many additional varieties recognised throughout the world, for example the Jubilee Orpington, only the original colours are recognised by the American Standard, the Buff being the most common colour. In the beginning of the twentieth century, Herman Kuhn of Germany developed a Bantam variety of Orpingtons and the Bantam retains the appearance of the LF Orpingtons, but in a smaller size. There is a large variety of colours in the Bantam version, including black, blue laced, white, buff, red, buff black laced, barred, buff Columbian, and birchen.

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Orpington hen with chick

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Orpington chick

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Orpington hen

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Orpington juvenile

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Orpington rooster

For more about Orpingtons and their breeders's and owners' experiences with them, see our breed discussion here:

https://www.backyardchickens.com/threads/chicken-breed-focus-orpington.1088559/

Latest reviews

Pros: Adorable and fluffy; easy to pick up and cuddle! Cold tolerant, pretty good layers. Calm and kind to their flockmates. Middle-bottom of the pecking order.
Cons: Prone to obesity and poopy butt feathers.
I have two Lavender Orpington hens. They are so sweet and pretty! They are big girls, though. Not overweight (though that happens often with Orpingtons), but a bit chunky! Lots of fluffy feathers. They are friendly (they love cameras and shoes!), and let us pick them up for cuddles. (One of mine is pecking at my boots as I speak!)

One con is that their fluffy butts often get dirty and need trimming or cleaning. Not too big of a problem if you don’t mind that, though.

Overall, a great breed (the Lavenders are, at least); I would recommend them!
Purchase Date
April 2023

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English chocolates are super floofy smart and sweet
Pros: sweet &friendly, good with kids, cold hardy, large eggs, smart, brave
Cons: so poofy floofy they get dirty easily (floof drags on ground, and poop can get on butt feathers) &not too great in very hot weather.
whats funny about my chocolate orps is how they boss my ducks around. only 2 hens and they chase off all 12 ducks. they are brave.
they understand duck-speak. when there are treats theres a special quack to call the ducks ,,and the chickens actually come running so fast theyre the first ones there., they are smart.
They are very sweet and friendly, even jump up on my lap sometimes. and gentle with children.
so super floofy - they look round like beach balls! beach balls with feet lol. I have to really watch and check them often for bugs because their floof feathers practically drag on the ground. they also need bottom baths every few months . theres just too much floooof for the poops to make it over and out without sometimes getting on those butt feathers,
Purchase Price
$40 ea for poults at pol
Purchase Date
summer of 22

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Great article!
I love Buff Orpingtons and own 7 of them, very friendly and calm.
Great layers too!

Comments

How are they doing? Sorry you had this experiance. Two cochins I bought for my friend came with both lice and mites. I had to also treat them and it was not difficult to get rid of them, but it was tedious and I felt really bad for the little cochins.
I hope they feel better :)
 
I am really keen to have this breed with my frizzle chickens,
My daughter bought 4 off a lady, but she doesnt have any adults left.. only chickens a few days old.
If anyone has some they would like to sell,please message me.
thanks! :)
 
We have 18 hens, four of them are Buff Orpington hens. Three out of the four are the same as yours. The fourth is very sweet and loves to be petted. She comes right over when I call them. She is HUGE, the biggest hen we have. She lays jumbo eggs which always have double yolks. One even had three. I worry that this will have serious consequences as it is not normal, as you know.
 
Best wishes with that.. I am sorry to hear about your abhorrent Orp. My first ever chickens have been home hatched Lav Orps which are abiut 6 wks. old and they are everything that everyone has said they were, and more! If this is a hatchery bird (?) maybe try a private breeder or incubating them yourself to lessen the likelihood of running into that same temperment? The 'nice' ones are out there so glad you are not giving up on the breed.
 
I haven't been impressed with buff orpingtons either. Mine have ranged in temperament from independent/aloof to very shy/impossible to catch.
 
I cannot believe it i have an orp that is the nicest in my flock! ive herd that it is usually a mixed bag of tricks
 
Thanks, I will have to try that HugHess! :)
Oh, I'm sorry song of joy :/
Yes, I have one Turk.
 
Really? An aggressive Orpington? That must be unusual!! I have 2 Orpington hens. Both very sweet, friendly, and the best little girls. And one came from an abuse case.. Yours must just be rare, give the breed another go :) Maybe even adopt one and save a life instead of breeding a species that already has too many? Good luck :)
 
Is it possible to delete your own review and redo it? That might be the only way to fix it. :/
 

Item information

Category
Chicken Breeds
Added by
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Views
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Watchers
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Comments
710
Reviews
537
Last update
Rating
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