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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

I am fine with her broodyines. I was leaving a review and wanted to let other's know who might not know. Thanks for the input.
 
I gave a young "pullet" to a friend and they made the mistake of naming her Lola. You can see where this is leading . . .

Girls will be boys, and boys will be girls.
It's a mixed up, muddled up, shook up world,
Except for Lola. Lo lo lo lo Lola.

(anyone too young to get that, google "lyrics Lola The Kinks")

My rule now is NEVER name a chicken Lola.
 
We love our Silkies. They are quite friendly and follow my husband around like pups.
Elvis is a white pullet, Toot is a black cockerel, and the jury is still out on Buffy- the buff one. They all look like fuzzy little bunnies from a distance.
We will probably always have a few in our flock as pets.
 
bwaahAHAHAHA!! oh man, thank you for the laugh. I got a silkie roo free from a neighbor not really knowing what I was getting (I'd just had a predator attack and decided I needed a roo; neighbor had 2 and was only too happy to let me have one)... you summed him up perfectly: the fluffiest, cutest, DUMBEST little peckerhead EVER! Even his crowing was ridiculous! Neighbors had thought he was a pullet, so they'd called him Penelope...I renamed him Mr. P. As in, I pity the fool predator who messes with my hens! ..except, not so much. Mr. P was beyond fool himself. The first thing I did actually, was sit down with a pair of manicure/cuticle scissors and give him a face/eyeball trim so he could SEE. That helped quite a bit, but he'd still peck at any shoe that came near him (and try to mount it). And when the hens would make their alien buzzwhistle 'Uh-oh Predator!' alarm noise & stand stock still being wary, he's be dingling around, pecking your shoes, wandering here & there. SO DUMB! but oh-so-flufferly, and so calm & happy to be carried around once you got him off your shoe... He lasted maybe all of a week, wandered off & got snatched by something. My husband says he was the best chicken we ever had. I'll say he was definitely the most entertaining.
 
Oh my gosh he sounds like he was a hoot! So sorry for your loss! I haven't tried trimming their eyeball fluff yet...I've been planning on it, just haven't gotten around to it yet. :)
 
;-) well, the one good thing is that he would sit so still once you had him up in your lap, it was pretty easy to trim really close to the eye without too much fear of poking an eyeball. i had him wrapped in a towel though just in case. but it definitely helped! no more feathers poking him in the eye. good luck with yours!
 
That is adorable. I have a buff silkie bantam hen, Goldie, and she is really, really cute, but now she's very broody and with no roosters, I'm trying to keep her out of the nest box. She is by far my most determined girl. I guess I'll have to get a broody cage to help her change her mind. I haven't had to do that with my full size hens so far. Wish me luck.
 
aw they are so cute!! we have a silkie rooster that was given to us he watches out for the hens he is with and shows the big roosters who is boss!!
 
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Sometimes silkies can't see well if their crest is too big. She may just need a little trim around the eyes and then her "IQ" may improve. It is nice for a Silkie to have a Silkie friend when they don't fit in well with the rest of the flock.
 
BYC is very good at identifying the gender of your silkies. I had mine done and they were correct. If you ever need any help, just post a couple pics of the chicken you want to know about on a "is this a hen or a rooster" thread and you will have results within the next couple days.
 
my silkies follow the lead of the week-older buff orpingtons i adopted with them...they all really take dust baths... not sure if they normally do without having other breeds in the same flock
But people do clean them in the sink
 
I have a number of Silkies, and though I love them, they do not not dote on me, and they do not make great demands of me. Some of the things I've found out about my 16 bird flock: they are hardy, adaptable, and prolific, and seemingly immune to disease. The hens lay LOTS of eggs and may be my best layers; they are good foragers and willing captives, but they seem to be happier free-ranging; my Silkies get along fine with my LF, and they stick together as a single tight unit; the roos can be nasty as adolescents, but mine have mellowed out to a nice decency in their older age; mine don't like being handled, and I don't like handling them; they do have unique and engaging personalities; because they are light (on their feet), they seem not at all prone to foot problems; they don't get frost bitten. They are great birds to have hanging about, and I can recommend them to anybody. And mine have been good broodies and wonderful mothers. They are prolific.
 

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