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Sicilian Buttercup

The Sicilian Buttercup is a member of the Mediterranean class. It was imported from the island...

General Information

Breed Purpose
Ornamental
Comb
Buttercup
Broodiness
Seldom
Climate Tolerance
Heat
Egg Productivity
Low
Egg Size
Small
Egg Color
White
Breed Temperament
Friendly,Wild/restless, Not bear confinement well
Breed Colors/Varieties
Males are a rich orange red with black spangles in their feathers and a lustrous black tail with beetle-green highlights. Base color for females is deep gold or amber with all feathers accented by black spangles. Shanks and toes are olive or yellowish green.
Breed Size
Large Fowl
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The Sicilian Buttercup, aka Flowerbird we know originated from the island of Sicily. The exact makeup of the breed is lost in time, but it is thought that it descends from the Siciliana breed native to Sicily, which was developed when local birds were interbred with North African birds. Similar chickens are seen in 16th-century paintings found in Rome, Paris and the Vatican.

The Buttercup is easily recognisable due to its unique comb and attractive color pattern. The Buttercup has two single combs which merge at the front and back giving it the appearance of wearing a crown. It comes in only one color/pattern, the roosters are a reddish gold with black tail and the hens a goldish buff in color, with the hens also marked with regular black spangles. It is quite heat tolerant, very active and a good forager. While it is often flighty when young, it is a social bird and adults are usually quite people friendly. They are very good flyers. The combs are susceptible to frostbite, especially the larger combs on the males. The hens are Fair to Good layers of medium sized eggs and are non broody.

It was imported into the US as early as 1835, the first well documented import was in 1860 when C. Carroll Loring of Dedham, Massachusetts, who bred and promoted them for over fifty years, received birds from a Captain Dawes. Captain Dawes had taken some chickens for meat on an ocean voyage, he kept some of the better laying ones which he gave to his neighbor Mr Loring. It is known that all current birds also descend from a shipment that arrived in 1892. It was quickly popular as a laying hen and as an exhibition bird and the first breeders club in the US had 600 members by 1914, it was added to the APA in 1918. Its popularity was rather short lived as it was not competitive with the commercial leghorn type breeds so far as egg production. The breed was also popular in England in the 1920’s but also declined in popularity with the advent of the commercial laying breeds.

It was recognized by the APA in 1918.
It is on The Livestock Conservancy's Watch / Threatened list.

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Sicillian Buttercup chick

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Sicillian Buttercup juvenile

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Sicillian Buttercup hen

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Sicillian Buttercup rooster

For more information on this breed and their owners' and breeders' experiences with them, see our breed discussion here: https://www.backyardchickens.com/threads/chicken-breed-focus-sicillian-buttercup.1137582/
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Latest reviews

Cute, but impractical.
Pros: Pretty little birds
Cons: Flighty, broody, fairly aggressive on the nest. Poor layers of tiny white eggs. Not winter hardy. Do not do well in confinement.
My initial mixed flock included Buttercups. They are a pretty, small bird and the comb gives them a unique look. At least one of the hens was very broody and would peck you rather nastily if you tried to move her to get the eggs she had set on, which was usually only 2-3. Despite their small size they did not do well confined to our 10'x20' covered run. I'm surprised by the reports of them being friendly. I assume that they were handled frequently when growing up. Mine were quite flighty and quick to take cover when I entered the run unlike the Australorps which came to the gate looking for treats and follow me around talking while I refilled feeders and waterers. I lost one to the dog and the other two in a particularly cold winter in the Mid-Atlantic despite having a fully enclosed coop to shelter in that they wouldn't use. the Australorps were fine, roosting in the rafters, but take to shelter when it gets really cold.

If I were able to have a large, free range flock, I wouldn't mind having one or two for decoration, but in these days for endemic avian flu, and having a Russell terrier mix that goes after any bird that gets flighty despite years of training, that's not practical.
Purchase Date
April 2015
Pros: Neat & unique comb. Cool personality.
Cons: Likes to jump out (over the fence) and free range. Vocal.
I have one Sicilian Buttercup... RC... I call her my "Racecar Chicken" - due to her head ornament (comb - she has a perfect little buttercup 'crown') and "spoiler" (erect tail) LOL.
I love her - and she makes me want to breed more just like her!

RC comes up to me to hang out. She likes to poke me, not peck...rather, it feels like she's "tapping me on the shoulder" (or my foot, ankle, knee...lol) to get my attention. She loves when I talk to her, and she chats back. She is very vocal...as we can have a "conversation" that is back-and-forth! I love it!

(I don't mind this...though I see that some would...) She jumps the fence to free range, so she's always in-and-out of the pen. She is a great, active free-ranger. She is two years old and lays lovely little/medium white eggs...probably two or three a week.

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Pros: Lays regularly, large eggs
We adopted an adult SB this past summer. She is a good egg layer, although her eggs are super long and slimmer than most. They look like a bullet! She is not a cuddley chicken, nor is she aggressive towards humans. I have caught her pulling feathers from her "sister's" tail and eating it but I believe this is a habit she learned in her previous coop from lack of nutrition. If you want an egg layer this is a good breed. If you want a pet, look elsewhere.
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Comments

That should be pretty much the extent of spur growth. Not all that uncommon for some hens to have them...even some that are much longer and sharp. Very pretty bird!
 
I had three Sicilian Buttercups, two hens and a rooster. I loved them all. One hen was taken by an owl and the other two by a fox. Very sad days when that happened.
 
I have a Sicillian Buttercup named Spotla by my 4 year old. She is a very smart bird and a hero. She alerted me to a hawk that had one of my RSL. Thanks to her, I was able to save my Red who had only minor injuries and made a full recovery. If Spotla didn't come peck at the door, I would have never known!
 
I have two of them about 3 months old they are great funny girls like to show off I got them from my pet chicken they are great on the price of there chickes
 

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Category
Chicken Breeds
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