57815ce7_16110141_1858970904345475_6747556787823575040_n1.jpeg

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
LL.jpg

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:
20180223_161335.jpg

A male and female Australorp, aged 11 weeks:
juvie.jpg

Australorp rooster:

7005.jpg

Australorp hen:
LLhen.jpg

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

Great backyard + family chickens
Pros: Friendly, calm, good layers, often go broody you want chicks, funny, not super loud.
Cons: No big ones.
Have owned Australops for 5 years and love them.
Pros: Pretty
Calm
Cons: Attacks people
I have a black australorp rooster, Chanticleer, and he's a good guy...for the most part. Only con I have is that he attacks us every once in awhile.
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

Comments

I absolutely loooooove my babies!!! They do crow a lot, though. And my roo is a bit aggressive. I also get up to 10 eggs a day!!! Amazing!!
 
Beautiful chickens!! I have one BA and she is very nice and seems more independent than the other 7 chickens I have (different kinds). She is friendly and not flighty. I enjoyed your article. Thank you... Kay in NC... 1.28.16
 
They would do fine. They are a pretty docile breed. My neighbor's hen can be quite bossy to the youngsters but she is old and set in her ways. lol
 
Actually, there is a member here that goes by RattlesnakeRidgeWV that has the blacks, blues, and splashes that you could buy some eggs from, and he will send them to you if you wanted some. He has an posting about them here on the site.
 
Thanks for your post. I have eight B A's that are 8-weeks old. Very jumpy and not friendly. I may have to put them on our dinner table when they get big enough. I'd like some good egg producers, but not sure what breed to get. 2oldnow
 
My two Austro's are wonderful birds. The larger of the 2 lays just about every day and the other one lays 5x a week. Neither are bossy or pushy. Well, they are pushy with me. Whenever I come out with a treat for them Mama is the first there and will jump up and try to grab out of my hand whatever it is I am holding. It is very funny to see them running across the yard, fluffy butts swaying side to side, whenever I let them into the front yard. They get along will with my other two birds and I've had no issues with them. Good birds for a first timer I'd say
 
In my research, I'd read a lot of great things about them, which is why I got them for my first flock. @JessHeller I'm not sure why ours aren't friendly, but the other two I gave to neighbors aren't well liked either. It's possible it's the hatchery so @2oldnow if yours don't friendly up or lay like you want, I probably wouldn't try getting them from the same place. You could try a local breeder or an online hatchery to see if you get better results from a different line if you want to give the breed a second chance.
From the breeds we're trying for a our first go, our easter eggers were much friendlier to start with.
 
Our Australorps (purchased as day-olds) were horrible to handle from the time they got fast enough to evade capture and much worse when they found they could fly. It took a lot of persistence to catch them each time I set out to do it ... as they laughed at me constantly. They were not a pleasure to raise. Finally all those catch the chick endeavors became easier as they got bigger (one is now 6.6lbs, other is 5lbs at 23 weeks) and less nimble, catching started getting easier. A couple weeks before they started laying in week 21, one started to squat making catching her dead easy and the other knows if she's cornered she's caught. Being able to catch and handle the birds for health/parasite checks on a regular basis is important-- and not having it be a rodeo is high on the list! Both are now laying consistently and have calmed down, but it took some time and energy to accomplish.
 
@eggsbert we didn't have problems with pecking/biting but boy, kicking and scratching... incredibly strong. No problems within the flock- they were gentle with the others 'growing up' despite their size, and they fall about mid-pack now and are just beginning to lay- so far pretty consistent with one laying the biggest eggs so far, but we don't have months and months of data to look at yet.
 
Eggsbert, your experience with BA's matches mine. Bossy to the other girls, unsociable towards me, ok layers (but not fantastic). There are too many other breeds to try that I probably won't do these again.
 
@Shezadandy I'm glad none of our birds have shown an interest in flying, but they find other ways to cause trouble. We named ours Jessie and Jamie (after Team Rocket on Pokemon because they're trouble).
Hopefully yours continue to lay well, because ours got of to a good start but then dropped the ball.
@N F C I'm glad I'm not the only one having this kind of trouble. Otherwise I'd be questioning my animal husbandry skills/technique.
 
I love the Australorps! I just put 34 of the eggs that I got from you into my incubator last night. After they hatch out I will be able to have them in more colors than just the blacks.
 
we have 6 BA and they are 8 wks now. they are the silkiest of our 20 but they are so flighty!! once we get them to us though, they love to stick around. not sure about eggs yet but i know they love treats.
 
I believe I would get rid of the hostile breeds and keep the more mellow Australorps. I'm just guessing but I suspect you have production reds instead of true RIRs...those are good birds but good Australorps are much better. Just My Opinion.
 

Item information

Category
Chicken Breeds
Added by
Super Admin
Views
228,668
Watchers
74
Comments
503
Reviews
364
Last update
Rating
4.43 star(s) 376 ratings

More in Chicken Breeds

More from Super Admin

Share this item

Back
Top Bottom