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No, I offed all but one.Yes Kiki be careful! Last time she accidentally offed all her males lol
X2!!! LOL
4 to 1 now!!
I was mad because the one I did keep never crowed so I thought he was a dud.
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No, I offed all but one.Yes Kiki be careful! Last time she accidentally offed all her males lol
X2!!! LOL
4 to 1 now!!
The 3 others were early quitters. 2 all yellows and one tux.
No, I offed all but one.
I was mad because the one I did keep never crowed so I thought he was a dud.
Crap my bad.Ahh okay. So they never hatched then? I thought you were saying you had more that hatched that somehow died or were offed haha whoops![]()
He was wasn’t he? I thought you had major problems with fertility for a while?
Should have waited![]()
No no problems.He was wasn’t he? I thought you had major problems with fertility for a while?
Should have waited![]()
Crap my bad.
3 failure to thrives ....they died early.
They did hatch but crapped out on me.
No no problems.
I just started setting eggs immediately...as soon as the girls started laying.
He was a slow started is all.
Early quitter usually means quit inside the egg.
I said it wrong.
Thank you for clarifying my info regurgitationA&M have same meat as other coturnix. They have white skin for cleaner presenting carcass. They are a specific strain of coturnix created using birds with English White color and jumbos for size. Texas A&M bred them larger so they would develop white meat but they could only get up to almost a pound and no white meat materialized. Technically a person doesn't have A&M's (which are jumbo sized) unless they know their birds come from that strain. Most people actually have English Whites (which are not usually jumbo sized).
I don't know? I'll have to look up some more images and see.Did they drawn down?