sbucciarel
Songster
I would say they are medium.
They look tiny next to my Orpington eggs. On the scale they average medium weight.
It varies. My Cree Farms hens lay small to medium. My Cree and Rivergait cross hen lays a large.
Thanks.
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I would say they are medium.
They look tiny next to my Orpington eggs. On the scale they average medium weight.
It varies. My Cree Farms hens lay small to medium. My Cree and Rivergait cross hen lays a large.
I would say they are medium.
They look tiny next to my Orpington eggs. On the scale they average medium weight.
My experience has been that most line of ameraucanas lay eggs in the 1.7 - 2.0 oz range. I have selected for egg size so it is possible to do better than that. I personally only select birds that lay in the 2.0 oz range and currently have a hen that consistently lays a 2.3-2.5 oz egg. Her largest to date has been 2.6 oz. one of her offspring just started laying and is producing eggs in the. 2.2-2.3 oz range already . All that said, you should expect eggs from adult hens to be in that med to close to large range.
Thanks!!Don't be sorry, it means large fowl. Versus bantam size....
Hello all,
I'm posting this here and not the emergency forum because I really want some feedback regarding AM genetics. I have 2 cockerels, a Wheaten and a BW. Ordered eggs and a pullet from a breeder. Several different varieties of eggs. Of these eggs the hatch rate was less than 50% (not incubator, mine are 95% +). These were local eggs so no shipping involved. Out of that 50% hatch rate, there was a 25% fatality. Three had umbilicus problems, and 2 others had other problems, one died and the other may yet. No other chicks died from that hatch (full incubator of 180). Sadly, the incubator isn't mine . I don't have chicks die often. Maybe 1 in 50, so it's not our broody system.
That's the background to the Ameraucana question.
The Am's are VERY small, came from small eggs so the chicks were nearly bantam sized and the surviving BWA has feathered feet. She swears there were no other birds near her hen. I believe her because her operation is immaculate. Is it possible that all of the issues with her eggs are due to the birds being near or beginning molt? I'm committed to getting a pullet from her. Should I be concerned? Do these problems stem from too young of birds or birds entering molt? My AM eggs are all big. (I have AM's from multi-colored flock so have to call them EE's but they are still the same breed). Is it common for WA or BWA to have small eggs, umbilicus problems or feathered feet or leg issues? Deformities, are they from inbreeding?
Size reference : also note the leg. This chick never stood up properly, always balanced funny and flopped over easily. Finally on day 3 it's intestines fell out the umbilicus and it died.
Another (sussex) chick hatched the same day. See that splayed leg for balance?
I appreciate any input here. My chicken experience does not yet include the WA and BWA breed. If these are common problems, I'd like to know now.
Thank you!
You have an Ameraucana that regularly lays a Jumbo egg? That is a huge egg!