16 week old Starlight Green Egger. Need help with gender

Ben_ep1

In the Brooder
Apr 1, 2025
10
2
16
Hello! We raised four chicks to now 16 weeks old and thought all of them for sure to be hens. Our starlight green egger is now perhaps looking more rooster-like. We looked at her wings in the first week and were 100% positive she was a hen based off the two stepped wing. Her size and tail feathers developed the quickest out of all the hens. She showed no behavioral signs of being a rooster. Her comb developed at a similar rate as our other girls, and she does not have any waddle right now, when our other pullets do.

We’re concerned because we can’t have a rooster within city limits, but we don’t want to give her up unless we absolutely have to.

I’ve attached some pictures for reference. Please let me know what you think!

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He’s a cockerel. Wing sexing doesn’t work unless bred for, and using tail growth is a very poor sex indicator, as you have found
The only thing is she’s 16 weeks old and has never shown any signs of crowing. Typically SGEs crow anywhere from 10-15 weeks.
 
The only thing is she’s 16 weeks old and has never shown any signs of crowing. Typically SGEs crow anywhere from 10-15 weeks.
Some start very early, and others start very late.

Here are the pointers to him being male:

Long, pointy and shiny saddle feathers, pointy and shiny hackles, red shoulder patches.
 

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@LaFleche is right, thhere is no doubt that ìs a cockerel. In Pic #1 as he's facing the camera his long blond hackle feathers make him look like a rock star. As you compare Pic #2 tp Pic #3, it's obvious. His flowing saddle feathers in front of his tail are very evident and his entire stance is so different from that of the pullet in Pic #3. Finally, that big red shoulder patch. Compare to thhe few red feathers on the pullet's wings, farther back. Sorry, but there's just no doubt.
 
The only thing is she’s 16 weeks old and has never shown any signs of crowing. Typically SGEs crow anywhere from 10-15 weeks.

I’m not exactly sure how this came about. No LF cockerel here has crowed before the 5 month mark:confused:.

Each bird is an individual, and while the maturation rate of the breed can be taken into account, each male will crow at his own pace
 
100% a cockerel. Bearded birds don't have wattles and he has a pea comb which doesn't get very big. He has a male specific color pattern and male specific feathering. Feather sexing only works on specific crosses and tail growth doesn't mean much until a certain age
 

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