Yes! It is looking like so far we have:
- 1 buff silkie
- 1 white silkie
- 1 Mottled Cochin
- 1 Blue Cuckoo Marans
- 1 Black Cooper Marans
- 1 Easter Egger
- 1 Olive Egger
Week 3 photos! They are getting big so fast, if we didn't have bad storms rolling in I'd say it's almost time for them to go outside.
Demi. So sweet. I'm hoping the complete lack of pink in the comb is a good sign, keeping my fingers crossed since Demi is part of my straight run...
We are well into Week 2 and the chicks have officially reached their Awkward Teenage Weeks.
Took some photos so I can shame them later when they're older.
Luna was renamed to St. Fu (Saint Fu). Aka STFU. Because he/she never, ever shuts up. Ever. St. Fu is the smallest chick in the flock by...
Yeah it's really sad. I think a lot of people don't think much of it because they consider chickens "stupid" animals that are so bred for human consumption they aren't worth any ethical consideration. But anyone who has raised them from infancy knows that they're sentient emotional creatures...
Looks like a pullet to me too. If it's an OE mixed with Black Copper Marans I think they just have a pretty red face in general: http://www.theartofdoingstuff.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/black-copper-marans-hen.jpg
Spearmint because it smells good and it spreads like mad. Also daylilies because I get to enjoy the beautiful blossoms and then when I'm dead-heading the blossoms that are wilting the chickens get to eat them as a snack.
The feathers are stripped away on the underside of the bird so that wounds can be tended more easily after cockfighting bouts. It also makes the fights more bloody. Right before a fight the bird is plucked and its wattles are cut off so that the other bird can't rip them off.
Looks like in one...
I think it's a cockerel, none of my silkie pullets have ever had a walnut comb that large. Lots of wattle and dark blue spot on the cheek too, pullets have a lighter blue color usually in my experience.
I'm in Camp "Whenever It Needs It". With baby chicks I'll clean the brooder out once or sometimes twice a day, but once they hit the run it pretty much composts itself so I don't mess with it too much other than to cover it with mulch periodically when the chickens dig it down too low. That with...
I just got a new flock of baby chicks that was hatched on June 2nd, so I'm setting up this little thread so I can do some week by week photo shoots of them and generally keep up with their shenanigans as they get bigger.
Without further ado, here's the crew in their "We Survived Week One And...
Three Rhode Island Red hens, 1 Rhode Island Red rooster, 2 Buff Orpingtons, 2 Barred Rocks, and what looks like (maybe) 2 Ameraucanas. That's my best guess.
That rooster looks exactly like my White Plymouth Rock rooster that I had as part of my first flock. Such a nice cuddly bird but SO LOUD. I ended up rehoming him in the country, lol.
https://www.tractorsupply.com/tsc/cms/breed-directory-b
They have it listed under their colors on the Leghorn entry, but now that I read it again I guess it can also be interpreted as the breed just being available in those colors in general, not at TSC specifically.
I've never seen a Buff Leghorn anywhere either, at TSC or otherwise. I've only ever seen Buff Orps and Golden Comets. But it was one of their listed birds you can order though, not sure where they get their supply from. I'd believe a faulty Buff Orp over a Leghorn.
Also wanted to point out that I don't think TSC lists Buff Rocks as one of their sold breeds, just Buff Brahmas, Buff Leghorns, Buff Cochins, and Buff Orps. So it'd be pretty weird for one of those to get mixed in. Might be a Buff Leghorn though.