730ec959_chickensonmay8014.jpeg

Marans

The Marans, or French, Poule de Marans, is a French breed of chicken from the port town of Marans, in the département of Charente-Maitime, in the Poitou-Charentes region of western France.

General Information

Breed Purpose
Dual Purpose
Comb
Single
Broodiness
Average
Climate Tolerance
Cold
Egg Productivity
Medium
Egg Size
Large
Egg Color
Dark Brown
Breed Temperament
Friendly,Easily handled,Docile
Breed Colors/Varieties
Silver Cuckoo, Golden Cuckoo, White, Copper Black, Black, Wheaten, Black-tailed Buff, and Ermine. MANY colors in development!
Breed Size
Large Fowl
700.jpg

The Marans, or French, Poule de Marans, is a French breed of chicken from the port town of Marans, in the département of Charente-Maitime, in the Poitou-Charentes region of western France. It was created with the local feral chickens descended from fighting game chickens carried from Indonesia and India. Those original Marandaise fowl were "improved" for the table through crossing with imported Croad Langshans. A favourite at poultry shows, it became a dual purpose breed known both for its extremely dark brown eggs and fine meat qualities.

Marans are generally quiet and docile; but they are quite active, taking well to free ranging in rough terrain and are also tough and disease-resistant. Their gentle temperaments and quiet demeanor makes them ideal for suburban backyard chicken keepers, as well as any assorted farm flock as they rarely bully smaller breeds. Marans are historically a dual-purpose bird, prized not only for their dark eggs but for their table qualities as well. Though the original Marans could also be feather legged birds, British breeders preferred the clean legged version, and thus feathered legged Marans are now mainly found in France. The Australian Poultry Standard recognises both feathered and clean-legged birds, while the Marans Club of America only recognises feather-legged birds.

39988813_marans-4158-908647.jpeg
Marans egg

49901dca_BCM_baby1.jpeg
Marans chick

c77b8f2e_IMG_4259.jpeg
Marans juvenile

ea6226fd_IMG_5003.jpeg
Marans hen

1000.jpg
Marans rooster

For more about the Marans breed and their owners' and breeders' experiences with them, see our breed discussion here: https://www.backyardchickens.com/threads/chicken-breed-focus-maran.1132230/

Latest reviews

mystic marans
Pros: very pretty dark brown eggs, friendly
Cons: lays really big eggs, which can cause the hen to become egg bound
I've only had one maran, she was a mystic maran. She was very sweet, laid huge dark brown eggs, had a big build, although not overweight. I don't remember her much because she died a long time ago. I think she probably died because she got egg bound.
Purchase Date
March 2019
Cuckoo Marans
Pros: Dark brown eggs

Not a bully

Very beautiful
Cons: Can go broody (good or bad)

A little skittish

Near bottom of pecking order
I love the cuckoo marans, Kiki. She’s pretty sweet, but a little skittish. Right now she went broody for the first time.
Her eggs are currently my favorite in the basket, though they’re not super dark brown. (Attached picture is of my EE, Australorp, and Marans egg)

Overall, I would recommend. In my experience, can be a little skittish, but I still love Kiki to pieces, even if she doesn’t like to be held.
Purchase Price
3.00
Purchase Date
March 2020

Attachments

  • 83E4028C-2812-4039-9CD8-86BCCF131496.jpeg
    83E4028C-2812-4039-9CD8-86BCCF131496.jpeg
    537.8 KB · Views: 57
  • 272A78A7-5808-4793-8B24-DE4828DFB085.jpeg
    272A78A7-5808-4793-8B24-DE4828DFB085.jpeg
    447.2 KB · Views: 60
  • BBFACB96-5BFF-4A1F-A01B-4DE10303ED82.jpeg
    BBFACB96-5BFF-4A1F-A01B-4DE10303ED82.jpeg
    401.1 KB · Views: 70
  • 67F4A8D3-9FD8-4A5A-84B9-2E36D3C646FD.jpeg
    67F4A8D3-9FD8-4A5A-84B9-2E36D3C646FD.jpeg
    320.1 KB · Views: 70
Pros: Enjoy those dark brown eggs, overall a nice bird
Cons: Not the most productive hens, dark brown is only consistent at the beginning
I really wanted to add dark brown egg layers to my little flock. They are a pretty bird with a fairly even temperament. The first eggs were very dark & they lay quite well. But they didn't have a very long laying spell for a first year chicken. They quit entirely for the winter & are slow to get going in the spring. The dark egg definitely gets lighter & never gets as dark as the 1st summer again... but still darker than the average brown layer. I haven't decided whether to get them again mostly because I find them not terribly productive even at about a year old & that the really dark initial eggs never get that dark again.
Overall.. would recommend trying them for a little colour in your egg basket.
  • Like
Reactions: ChickenGirl300
L
Leahsandora11
I have a few Australorps and they lay brown eggs, winter is just ending and they laid the whole winter, you could try these breeds. They are really good. They've stayed darker brown the whole time!

Comments

I'm just learning, but I've read that the marans do better with a slightly higher incubation temperature because of the thicker shells. Also read a lot about "dry hatching" these eggs and keeping the humidity lower because the shells are not as "breathable" and the chicks drown when they start to pip. I have not hatched any myself yet, just trying to learn before we go down that road.
 
I've been told to immediately grab them and put them (carefully) on their backs until they yield (stop struggling). Apparently they will not challenge you again. So I'm told...haven't had a nasty rooster yet
 
Gosh, I have one. I had two but one was attacked by in-laws dog last year, she lost most of one side of breast muscle to infection but pulled through, kept on laying the whole time. Then in February, I was out of town and she didn't make it in the automatic door for some reason, it was just too much for her cold wise and she didn't make it. However I find these pretty resilient and the one I have left is definitely top girl and only gives a peck when she thinks the younger ones are intruding on her treats. She was even fine during her molt. I absolutely love mine. (I only have one bully but she's an Ameracauna + ? mix. And that's only since she's been molting too.)
 
yes you will get an olive egger-the lighter or darker the olive depends on the bcm darkness and the lightness or darkness of the blue egg from Ameraucana-I have different shades of Olive eggs because of this. I love the different colors. The bcm that I have now are super dark layers. I have not mixed them with anyone other than a blue maran rooster.
 
My Black Copper Marans (Cinders) is very similar. She's the most nervous, the greediest, and definitely the poorest layer (average 2 - 3 eggs a week). However I love her to bits - her feathers are beautiful and she's by far the most gorgeous girl in my flock, and since I get enough eggs for my needs from the other girls, I don't mind in the slightest that she doesn't lay too often. She also sings proudly every time she lays (or even if she's only spent some time on the nest with no result!)
 
My BCM roo is so passive. The girls pick on him all the time and recently have plucked out his feet feathers. :(
 
I have three Black Copper Marans hatched April 1, 2013, and they are docile, friendly, and laying 56 to 60-gram brown eggs. Next to Chicken TV, our favorite pastime is weighing eggs!
 
I have 3 Marans hens and one Rooster now. I love the large, dark eggs. They are great layers, however the roosters have been quite aggressive. This has been a problem which I still have to figure out out to deal with.
 
I have a Cuckoo Marans in with a Buff Cochin and two Easter Eggers. They are all about 4 months old. So far I see no aggression from my Marans. As a matter of fact, I am growing to respect her quite a bit, she has a quiet confidence and commands respect without being aggressive, and the others wouldn't think to mess with her. She is big, strong, and feel like she can be mean if provoked. I think she is the top hen though she mainly just does her own thing.
 
I have a mixed flock too. The older hens are 3 or 4 years old with some youngsters (Marans) I raised last year. No problem with the hens, but the roosters? Another story altogether!
 
Oh my goodness, the crowing! My first real experience with roosters is my 15-week-old broody-hatched BCM, Desi. He just started crowing, and it sounds like one of those party noisemakers. So annoying! I didn't realize they marans had a "unique" voice. His sister sure talks funny compared to my other hens (like a honking duck). I'm experimenting with a home-made collar, but so far, no luck. Sad, because I can't legally have roosters, and he's a gorgeous one.
 
I have 3 bcm roos. They are really pretty, and very tolerant of my children. Boy oh boy that crow lol!! They tell the sun it's almost time to wake up at 3:30am and when the moon is hitting the snooze button for it, they go in 10 min intervals until the sun finally gets it's lazy butt out of bed. At least after that, they generally settle down until it's time to tell the sun to go to bed. During the day, it's my buff orp roo sounding off every 10 minutes ;)
 
Haha! yeah, mine crowed in the dark, early morning, yesterday, which was when I knew we were in for trouble!
 

Item information

Category
Chicken Breeds
Added by
Super Admin
Views
135,778
Watchers
39
Comments
168
Reviews
135
Last update
Rating
4.12 star(s) 141 ratings

More in Chicken Breeds

  • White plymouth rock
    With a super kind temperament and 4-6 eggs per week, you really can't go wrong with this breed!
  • Showgirl Silkies
    A showgirl silkie is a silkie with no feathers on their neck.
  • Olandsk Dwarf
    Bright, social birds. Beautiful Plumage with speckles covering the body. Roosters rarely fight...
  • Wyandottes
    These birds are usually overall friendly, are good layers, and are very pretty.
  • Australorp
    The Australorp is a docile, friendly, and easy going chicken. Several people find them great for...

More from Super Admin

Share this item

Back
Top Bottom