Ameraucana thread for posting pictures and discussing our birds

Nope, actually you haven't. I've been getting some photos of my girls since you posted that.

First to ask, this is my favorite black hen. . . BUT, I just noticed today while she was running around, she's got what appears to be white earlobes?! How common is this, and how worried should I be? None of her siblings or parents had it.

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Next, although the Wheaten pullet I showed earlier with the "ideal rear" didn't look as tucked in as Jean's beautiful white cock, this is her from the side view. . . And exactly why I like her. She's still very well tucked in, yet from the rear doesn't look too narrow.
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The previous pictured "ideal rear"

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Here's a Blue Wheaten, who I think has a bit too narrow of a rear AND tail. Still pretty though, but I'm seriously thinking of selling her.

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And this is why I ask. . . What is an ideal rear? This is hers, which I think is too narrow:

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And this is for you especially Jean - The drop-dead gorgeous but sadly badly roughed up Buff pullet I got from you!
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And in relevance to all that. . . Here's my favorite blue hen, who is finishing up on molting. Now, my question is, is she too loosely feathered or fine? Because she's considerably much looser looking than my almost tight-feathered Wheatens and Blue Wheatens, and seems even more loose than the Buff, who seems in between them. Maybe its just that she's blue or molting that has me thinking she's too fluffy. . . Because the cockerels of her breeding are just perfect.

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In contrast. . . Here's a black, who is much tighter at the rear, but she has what I consider a pinched tail. It is well spread top to bottom, but side to side it is very narrow.

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As a last note, the background of all these photos looks horrible because we've been experiencing our annual "monsoon" winters of torrential rain, muck, and random debris that gets blown around.
 
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Yes

Here's the Auction

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I need to watch ebay more

He has been listing wheatens too. All you probably need to do is contact him through the ABC breeder list.

I would think people would rather sell to other breeders than randomly on ebay.
 
pips&peeps :

This is an example of what a cock bird ameraucana tail is supposed to look like:

https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/5845_blanco.jpg

You can see how tight the feathers are on the whole bird. The saddle area is not real wide and the back is bit longer. The feather itself on the lavenders needs to be a bit wider also.

This is by no means a perfect bird, but a pretty good specimen to compare to.

A fault I have seen on alot of the lavender cockerels is low hanging wings. The lavender cockerel pictured previously has nice tightly held wings, but be aware of it when breeding. And another thing I don't like on some of the birds I have been breeding is the eye. I don't know exactly how to describe it, but it's not a wide expressive eyeball. I call them "beady eyes" and I cull every one of them that has it.

I haven't got this concept of tight feathering. Is it like that of the Dark Cornish? That is the only one that comes to mind when you say tight feathering. I have been calling it close feathering.​
 
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I haven't got this concept of tight feathering. Is it like that of the Dark Cornish? That is the only one that comes to mind when you say tight feathering. I have been calling it close feathering.

No, that's hard feathering.

Tight feathering is like shown on her White cock and my Blue Wheaten hens. Loose feathering is like that of an Orpington or Wyandotte. The rear is very open and fluffy, and the rest fluffs out pretty well, too. Tight feathering is when the rear is more closed, and the rest of the body is outlined better.

Hard feathering is when the feathers are stiff and grow firmly against the body. It is only found on Oriental Gamefowl and relatives like the Cornish.
 
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I haven't got this concept of tight feathering. Is it like that of the Dark Cornish? That is the only one that comes to mind when you say tight feathering. I have been calling it close feathering.

No, that's hard feathering.

Tight feathering is like shown on her White cock and my Blue Wheaten hens. Loose feathering is like that of an Orpington or Wyandotte. The rear is very open and fluffy, and the rest fluffs out pretty well, too. Tight feathering is when the rear is more closed, and the rest of the body is outlined better.

Hard feathering is when the feathers are stiff and grow firmly against the body. It is only found on Oriental Gamefowl and relatives like the Cornish.

Okay then, I can't really tell how that looks in the picture. I am more of a hands on fellow that can hold something and look at it and tell what it looks like better.
 

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