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Brahma

The Brahma is an Asiatic breed of chicken. The first Brahmas were brought to the United States in...

General Information

Breed Purpose
Dual Purpose
Comb
Pea
Broodiness
Average
Climate Tolerance
All Climates
Egg Productivity
Medium
Egg Size
Large
Egg Color
Light Brown
Breed Temperament
Friendly, Easily handled, Calm, Bears confinement well, Docile
Breed Colors/Varieties
Light, Buff, Dark, Gold, Black, White, Blue, and Blue Columbian.
Breed Size
Large Fowl
APA/ABA Class
Asiatic
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There has been considerable controversy over the true origins of the Brahma breed, but appears to have developed in the US originally, from birds imported from China. They were send off from the port of Shanghai and were thus known as "Shanghai birds". Brahmas as we know them were first exported to England in December 1852, when George Burnham sent nine "Gray Shanghaes" to Queen Victoria as a gift. The Dark Brahma variety was developed by English breeders from this stock and later exported to the United States, where the Brahma was the principal meat bird from the 1850's to around 1930. Some of these birds were very big, with males weighing in at up to 18 lb and females at 13 lb.

The Light and Dark Brahma were developed and included in the first edition of the American Poultry Association's Standard of Perfection in 1874 and the Buff variety was added in 1924. The Australian Poultry Association has accepted black, blue, partridge, crele and barred varieties of Brahma in addition to the standard light, dark, and buff.

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Brahma eggs

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Brahma chick

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Brahma juveniles

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Brahma hen

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Brahma rooster

For more about Brahmas and their owners' and breeders' experiences with this breed, see our breed discussion here:

https://www.backyardchickens.com/threads/chicken-breed-focus-brahma.992485/

Latest reviews

good breed for beginners
Pros: Likes being held when young, gets along great with other chickens, doesn't tend to peck on others.
Cons: Feathers on feet can get dirty if you have a lot of mud in your yard
This is my light brahma, Dottie. Very sweet hen, kinda shy, but not skittish.
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Beautiful, calm chickens
Pros: Docile, very pretty, can't fly well
Cons: Eggs aren't as big as I expected, feathered feet can get nasty
I love their size and the fact that they don't fly over short fences.

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Pros: Good layers
Sweet personality
Easy-going with other flock members
Cons: Feathered legs get muddy and hard to keep clean
My Brahmas made me laugh on a daily basis. Big friendly girls. I plan to get more.

Comments

Buddy is beautiful! I'm looking forward to getting some different colored Brahmas. I currently have a Light Brahma. Her temperament is so sweet!
 
I totally agree. I had light, dark and buff... The dark were my worst layers, light next and buff were the best-worst... They were my favorite birds to look at, absolutely gorgeous but I don't eat with my eyes. I want and expect eggs from my chooks, so I decided to move them out. I kept a cpl Buff roo's to cross with and have been getting some nice birds but that nagging low egg production seems to be passing on. :( I too was surprised at how such a large bird laid med sized eggs. Their feed to egg ratio is not good.
 
I know the review is almost 3 yrs ago but..... My experience with Brahmas is the roos are aggressive, but only toward the hens. I've never had a people aggressive roo as some of the reviews mention... My roos like yours would hit the hens the second they got back on the ground. They are very sexually aggressive and very good dancers as well. :)
 
I have dark brahmas also they are great have just added 10 golden comets to my brood. They are young don't even have all there feathers yet.
 
Hello! I'm surprised that such a large breed has found it's way to your home. If it's hot there, that might hold hold her back. I hope she kicks into gear for you...they are nice quiet birds usually, lay regularly but are never prolific.

RON
 
My Brahmas are the sweetest things ever--a light, a dark, and two buffs, all docile and sweet. Where did your mean nasty Brahmas come from? I would keep chickens that were that bad.
 
They came from a regular feed store. I saw them and I was just like "Aw! They're so cute!" But I wasn't sure I wanted them but my sister put them with the other chicks I was getting.LOL

You would?
 
I had a pretty mean little Bantam Brahma for a couple of years. She was always sweet and on the bottom of the pack until I got more chicks and I saw a new girl emerge. Even when the chicks were 8 months old, and bigger than her, she would be wandering around out in the pen then all of a sudden come tearing into the coop to thump on a few girls. I put her on Craigslist, describing her to a T, and charging $15, only so that someone looking for a free meal wouldn't think my Bantam was worth it. She went pretty fast and wow, did things settle down around here. Good luck finding homes for your girls! As pretty as those little Brahmas are, it sure isn't worth it, is it!
 
I just got 10 chicks today and they are every where in their brooder. I love to just set and watch them having fun. A good breed of chickens. I just love the anything that has a blue color. That is what I have mostly.
 
I love it when chickens and roosters do that. I have a Boston Red that is that way. When it's cold outside, she comes over to me and jumps up and down for me to pick her up, She wants in my jacket. I put her in it and zip it with just her head outside. She stays like that until I get finished with the chores and then she goes back to her pen. She is such a loving hen.
 
I don't know why so many folks fail to grasp one very important theorem regarding 'chicken math'. The weight of the egg is far more important than it's size.

Before you get all deflated or overly excited about what appears to be a monster or a tiny egg....weigh them. Surprises are coming your way. lololol
 
So are Brahma cocks aggressive? I really want to get Brahmas to have in my flock, and also to show in the fair. I'm thinking about a breeding pen, which requires 1 cockerel and two pullets, and would probably sell the cockerel and keep the pullets. However, I'd have the cockerel for a few months before the fair with my other flock, so I'm wondering if I'd have to worry about mating and/or hostility. I could just show two pullets in Brown-Egg Production, but I'm wondering how well Brahmas lay, because they might not do so well in that category.
 
Brahmas lay pretty well--even through the winter--but if you're after eggs alone, you're better off with Rhode Island Reds, They can show pretty well, but are hard to find in show quality (judges want them really dark red). Brahmas lay rather small tinted eggs (pale brown, sometimes pinkish) a few times a week. Soem people have ones that lay an egg a day, but ours were young and just getting started when they were rehomed. RIR lay oodles of huge brown eggs (you'll have them coming out of your ears). RIR are mixed bag with temperament, however. Ours were amazing, and I loved them very much, but not everyone has the luck we did. Depending on who you get them from and what that person/organization breeds for, you can vastly different animals within the same breed, so do some research and meet the parents when you can.

Our Brahma cock wasn't aggressive with other people, and he never fought with our other roosters, but he tried to mate with everything in the yard and wasn't particularly suave about it. I chalk most of this up to him being young and hormone crazed rather than being strictly mean. It's probably something he grew out of, but I wouldn't know because he was rehomed. He was still (quite typical of the breed) very quiet and gentle with people. Most Brahmas are known for exceptional docility, and so far, the ones I have now are all 'normal' in that regard. Very fluffy, sweet natured, easy going birds.

It's very hard to find a breed that will do well in show and still lay really well.
 
Thanks! Do you have any idea of when the mating hormone kicks in? I'd have them for about six months. I suppose I could keep him separate from my pullets and other hens; I have some Leghorns, Sex-Links, and Barred Rocks. I know Brahmas weigh a lot, so my present hens could get injured from mating.
 

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