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Silkie

The silkie chicken was developed in the southeast asian countries or china.It was valued as a medicinal food item because of its black skin and bones

General Information

Breed Purpose
Ornamental
Comb
Walnut
Broodiness
Frequent
Climate Tolerance
All Climates
Egg Productivity
Medium
Egg Size
Medium
Egg Color
Light Brown/ white
Breed Temperament
Friendly, Easily handled, Calm, Bears confinement well, Quiet, Docile
Breed Colors/Varieties
Grey, Blue, Splash, Partridge, Buff, Black, White are the standard colors with many off standard & derivative colors in existance today.
Breed Size
Bantam
APA/ABA Class
Feather Legged
Color
Grey, Blue, Splash, Partridge, Buff, Black, White are the standard colors with many off standard & derivative colors in existance today
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The Silkie breed was developed in the southeast Asian countries or China. It's named for its atypically fluffy plumage, which is said to feel like silk. The breed has several other unusual qualities, such as black skin and bones, blue earlobes, and five toes on each foot, whereas most other chickens only have four. They are often exhibited in poultry shows and come in various colors. It was valued as a medicinal food item in Asia, because of its black skin and bones, and was thought to be particularly good to reinforce body immunity and protect from emaciation and feebleness. It also is reported to treat diabetes, anemia, female reproductive functioning and postpartum disorders. Marco Polo gave the first accounts of Silkie chickens in the late 13th century. As trade route between East and West were established, the Silkie was brought to Europe. Records have shown that in the Netherlands, they were sold as the product of crossing a rabbit and a chicken!

Nowadays the breed is very popular for the purpose of pet chickens as well as exhibition. They are not good layers, averaging 3 eggs per week, but are known and valued for their exceptional broodiness and are often used for hatching eggs from other breeds. They are also considered very good pet chickens, especially for children and are known for their friendliness and docile temperaments.

The breed was officially recognized in North America by acceptance into the Standard of Perfection in the first year of publication which was 1874.

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Silkie juvenile

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Silkie chick

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Silkie rooster

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Silkie hen

For more information on Silkies and their owners' and breeders' experiences with them, see our breed discussion here:

https://www.backyardchickens.com/threads/chicken-breed-focus-silkie.1048544/

Latest reviews

so cute and fluffy
Pros: Roosters are friendly!!
Fluffy and cute
very laid back
Love the crest and beard!
Cons: I don't like that they're usually sold as straight run, with sexed females being very expensive
My hen with a big crest and beard can't see, at all. Sometimes gets picked on. When i have treats she wobbles over and circles around, not being able to get to the treats because she can't see properly.
I love this breed, I just wish they were more often sold as sexed females.
Purchase Price
6$ but straight run
Purchase Date
april 2
Nicest, cutest, and fluffiest babies ever.
Pros: Amazing pets, great hatchers, sweet, can be kept in a smaller space.
Cons: Low egg production and eggs are small. Also take up to a year of age to start laying.
I have a few and I love them to death. Got to say that they're my fav breed. They take a long, long time to lay though.
Pros: Super sweet
fluffy
Delighting to the eye
Cons: Can get picked on easily
Broody
I have one of my own and she is super sweet I would highly recommend one if your looking to naturally hatch out some eggs.

Comments

Silkies are the best. Some people are even keeping them in their home as a house pet.
They are my favorite breed and they really are better companions than most cats. They are fun, beautiful and great mothers. They are bantams so they stay small, that makes it easier to keep more and have all different colors. Once you have Silkies, you will always have Silkies.
 
So funny you said that because my one Silkie is the boss. She gets right in there to get her share of the food, She is the only one that will fly up and peck my Great Dane on the nose, so funny. Call me crazy but I also think my Silkie knows her name!!
 
I Love Layers,

I am really surprised reading your review. I have Silkies because of my son and I can't keep the darned things from going broody; and they aren't even being bred! They will just sit and sit and sit! They steal other hens' eggs to sit on too. The only time mine act snippy is when I take their eggs away, then they puff up and hiss and squawk at me. LOL Like I said, I only have them because my son wanted them otherwise they wouldn't be around. My husband calls them "assisted living animals"; meaning they don't contribute anything to the farm. To me they are just lawn ornaments. They remind me of Muppets.
 
I'm SHOCKED that you left a review that sounds like this. My silkies are the gentlest, sweetest chickens ever, and my rooster is so kind and gentle with all the girls.
 
Wow. I agree with the other comments. I am surprised your silkies acted like that. Mine are sweet and calm. Even the rooster is not mean or aggressive. I'm sorry for your bad experience, but maybe you could try again with silkies from a different source.
 
You ha dno busimess putting thw chicks in with grown hens,this can happen with any chciken flocl.My guess is uou were having some space probs or soemthing,I have never raised silkies but know from reviwes and comments, this is not to be expected from silkied.
 
Also - my Silkie(s) average 4-6 eggs a week, same with my cochins. When they are broody, they go broody for 3-4 months if I don't break them of it.
 
Weird....but some really are anomalies. I had that problem with my sebrights. I hand raised them, socialized them, but when they became old enough for mating, my sweet little banty roos became little devils...pecking at me whenever they got the chance, trying to challenge & chase me (or anyone)-especially if I wore bright colors, loose clothes, or scarf, they were like little bulls-while the same little hens were as sweet as sugar. Anyway, I put the baddest boy in solitary confinement...(alone in a big dog kennel)...til I figured out what to do with him (I considered a stew pot but prefer vegetarian). Anyway, I began taking him out & holding him regularly, giving treats by hand, but at the first aggressive peck/or challenge, he'd get put right back (gently) in the kennel...Never hurting, scaring, or being rough with them-as (not unlike children) that would only traumatize, stimulate their defenses, & encourage more bad behavior. Believe it or not, after a month or two, he was fine. In fact, if he ever got picked on by the bigger roos while they re-acclimated, he'd run to me for protection. Then, a couple months later I went out of town, for about three weeks, & had an experienced family regularly looking in on them & collecting their eggs. By the time I returned, I found that not only had the banty roos returned to their aggressive behaviors but now my big sweet Orpington roo had become a big monster as well; & some of my "cuddle muffin" hens had now become aloof & much more timid. Now, they don't seem to have much memory capability, need frequent socialization/human interaction, but I do believe there could be much psychology going on as well. I'm no animal behaviorist, but do wonder if there's any chance someone (especially kids) may have been rather loud, scary, or too rough with yours? It's amazing how much an effect we can have on them, how much they can effect one another, & how different their own individual personalities can be. Anyway, hope it gets better.
 
Wait- you put chicks in with them when they weren't broody? They don't just magically go broody when they see chicks.
 
did you raise them from chicks? in my experience if you handle them a lot as chicks they end up being a lot more friendly
 
I have had an aggressive male, but technically he wasn't aggressive, he was actually protecting his hen while she was sitting on eggs. I broke him from this agressiveness. He's the sweetest boy now...
Silkies are 100% dedicated to hatching babies, I had one sit for 2 months I finally had to hatch some out for her...

This review is a huge shocker, Silkies are not that noise and do live up to there expectations. Perhaps you didn't have a silkie and someone else was doing the nasty deed..
 
Cute! How does your one Silkie do without others of her kind? Has she made friends with another bantam? Does she have any LF friends? I am thinking of paring down my Silkie group to just one, but I don't want her to be lonely.
 
I have her in with two showgirls. In the pen are also two young showgirl/silkie babies that I'm growing out for someone and three easter eggers I also was growing out. They all get along well. I'd be nervous of putting a silkie in with full sized birds they weren't raised with, but I don't think they care what breed their flockmates are.
 
I love them! I have 3, only 1 hen though, she is a Black Bearded Silkie. She started laying in January. What a great breed! I am gonna show her this year. My roosters are protective, but sometimes attack my ankles :( Not too happy about that.
All in all, love em!
 
Yes they are silkies and everything I wrote is true about them. Raised them as chicks, they were handled quite a bit but not to much.
@TheTwoRoos and @allosaurusrock please do not assume I did not have adequate living areas or an incorrect area for chicks, I had them in a seperated area in the coop. I let the chicks and broody out under my supervision, none of my bigger hens bug the chicks I have ever had and actually act like second mothers, I looked away for 2 seconds not even kidding and a silkie hen had run over and was killing a chick and I do not mean pecking it once on the head I mean flinging it in the air. At this point the broody called all the chicks under her and as I was trying to grab the silkie hen she started making a huge commotion as always and the other silkie hen comes over and killed another chick. THERE WAS ABSOLUTELY NO REASON FOR THEM TO DO THIS AT ALL
 

Item information

Category
Chicken Breeds
Added by
Super Admin
Views
181,390
Watchers
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Comments
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Reviews
294
Last update
Rating
4.37 star(s) 300 ratings

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