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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.

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My2GirlsRanch
My2GirlsRanch
They are beautiful 🤩

Comments

I have 2 that are just now 17 weeks old and we are also hands on with our flock. They don't readily come to us but are also not really aggressive. One of them does like to peck at my feet so I just tap her head, tell her no and she stops. Their combs are turning bright red so I should start getting eggs soon.
 
I've had a couple from a hatchery act that way, it's rare that I've seen it, but they actually jumped up and pecked my side because I wasn't getting their feed fast enough! Lol.
 
I agree. My RIR are most likely Production Reds since I just bought them from my local feed store. I am not sure where they get their chicks from. Just like the chicks I bought as "Americauna's", they are most likely Easter Eggers since they do not lay blue egg. They order in on weekly basis.

But with that being said, I happen to like the more aggressive breeds since I let them run around my backyard freely with my 4 dogs. The RIR (or production reds) tend to stand up to the dogs more than the others. The only thing that keeps the dogs from chasing the Australorp is that it tends to hide in a corner when the dogs come out.

One of my dogs has killed a a couple of chickens, but he I have gotten him over that and now he just attacks and kills Dove that come into the chicken coop.
 
I have a ton of BA's and they lay tons of eggs! Some are friendly some aren't. But they LOVE to hatch babies!!
Mine are nice to humans

BCP
 
I am sorry to hear that your experience has not been a positive one. It sounds like you just got a dud! Where did you get her from? I suppose each chicken has their own personality, so it sounds like you got the queen bee, lol. Do you have a rooster to keep her in line? I have heard that that helps, though I am fairly new to chickies so I do not know personally.

I would say, based on my life experience with horses, there are SO MANY absolutely wonderful ones out there, it is not worth it to waste your time and energy (and in the case of the handful of downright mean horses I have known out of thousands-- it is not worth risking your life!!)-- so go forth and find a hen (Australorp or not) that brings you joy! Let this girl be mean to someone else (or make someone a nice meal, lol).
 
I have two Black Aussies; one, a rooster attacks me at every opportunity (He is very protective of the hens though, that's why I've kept him). The other is a pullet and is the most gentle and people friendly bird in my flock. Go figure.

Chickens are weird.
 
I had one named Peep, she was my favorite hen and she let me and my kids hold her all the time. One time I left for a few days and when I returned she was the only one who ran up to me like a pet dog excited for me to get home. She unfortunately died, but was a great pet. After we buried her a really large beautiful flowered plant (that was long dead) grew in the place she was buried (kind of like, Where the Red Fern Grows). They are wonderful birds. She also laid an egg almost every day.
 
I have one chicken broody for about 2 months now we have no roosters,
she gets out and stays out for a while so not to stubborn, but she is really gentle, she lets me pick her up and pet her. I do spend lots of time with them though, I only have five.
she is a well summer, and a year old. My other well summer is not broody anymore first summer that she has not been she is now three this year.
 
Hens yes, my rooster is a son of a gun. No one would put up with Big Jake. He has cut me, spurs so sharp it went through a pair of jeans, and hit me so hard on the hand they thought he broke a bone, turned out to be an infection $700 later. was a tiny spot.
At any rate he has damaged the feathers on the backs of 8 hens, little red to the point of looking plucked. He has and is in jail. Yes in jail. I have a large free standing rabbit cage outside the pen. He gets out to run the yard, puts himself back in jail every night. Then the girls get to run the yard the next day. He is DE-SPURRED NOW, I used a dremmel tool a thick cut off disc, and they are cut off a 1/4 inch from his leg. NO it didn't hurt him. There are no nerves in that area, and the tool turns so fast, it coterises the blood vessels from the heat as it goes through. When he gets me now (your back is always turned before he will do it) then he is stuck in his cell for 3 days. The cage is covered, gets sun and shade, and he has all items needed to live there. The girls are getting their back feathers again, and he will be returned to the flock in early winter. I don't need fertile eggs now anyways. NOTE, he is afraid of a broom and a net, nothing else, so if he's out, I tell others to take the broom just in case if they want to look at the rabbits.
I can't put him down, he's BIG JAKE. hahaha
 
I have two girls and they are the best. They are really nice and have beautiful plumage. Out of my six girls ( two Barred Rocks, two RIRs and two Australorps), my Australorp, Peppa was the first to lay. They are both supper cute though and I absolutely adore them. I would give this breed five stars and I would recommend these ckickens to everyone.
 
Australorps sure do have too come under my favourite breeds. I Have one pure Australorp girl and a couple of mixed ones. The pure one is my best brooder! She is a excellent mother and very reliable layer. She'll sit in the nest for hours until she's laid a good big egg, sometimes i'll find one of my girls (maybe her) have laid twice in one day! Australorps make stunning pets as well, She'll meet me at the gate every morning looking for her treats! Very gorgeous creatures. I'd definitely recommend these girls to everyone. The Australorp roos can be a bit of a handful. I have one... and more than twice he has tried to attack me. But he is very protective of his girls, Very stunning looks I must say.But He even comes to meet me at the pen gate every morning!
 
I hope you mean each of them... lol...Just having some fun with you. I really like the Australorp breed and fully intend to have a few again in the future. Enjoy YOUR birds!!
 
I had two Australorps in my flock of six, and I just loved them! Unhappily, one became the butt of the pecking order; it got so bloody that I rehomed her for her own good. Just a few months ago the second became egg-bound, and my efforts to free her up were fruitless. Eventually, someone culled her for me. I was heartbroken.Do you know whether Australorps have more tendency to become egg-bound than other breeds?
 
Bugseye- I'm sorry to here about your birds. I have never had problems with my black Astralops going prolapse. I have had a buff Orpington and blue Cochin have prolapse before, but we were able to save both. When a chicken goes prolapse it's usually because the egg was to big or the pushed to hard getting it out, Astralops tend to lay biggish sort of eggs so maybe that's why yours got prolapse.
 
Just seeing this now, sorry. I feared it was a constitutional problem of Australorps, but I would love to have them again.
 

Item information

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