Any tips for picking out chicks in a non-marked tub?

mtngrl812

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At the local feed store they have bins with "straight run" or "pullets" but no breeds listed. I asked the guy working and he said they were a shipment of "hatchery's choice", and that was the only info they got when they had called to inquired about the breeds in the shipment. So, can anyone give me some specific characteristics to look for that might hint at the breed. There were chipmunk looking chicks, but how can you tell if they are EE, or Welsummers, then there are yellow chicks with gray-ish blue patches on their backs, and there were a couple that were a really pretty rusty-red.

So any help figuring put what to kind of look for would be appreciated. I want a colorful flock to watch, with some hopefully colorful eggs to gather from friendly birds.
 
You really need to consider carefully when picking chicks from catch all bins like that. Part of the joy of owning chickens to have them express of beauty that is in the eye of the beholder, the owner/keeper. I think you need to like your chickens. Like their looks and behaviors.

You'll get mutts, odd breeds, oft times the wrong sex, and you'll still pay for them and surely, absolutely continue to pay and pay for their feed and care.

I would highly encourage you to only gather those chicks into your flock that you know, care about, prefer, etc. I'm all done, frankly, having chickens that I am not excited about. When you can only keep 6 or only keep 26, they need to be what you really want. Don't settle. FWIW
 
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I have been trying to hatch chicks from shipped eggs and I have been making some mistakes, add that to the shipping and I have nothing.
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I am so bummed, when I saw the chicks in the feed store I thought about getting a couple to have something in my my brooder. I have a coop half way done, a brooder waiting and an incubator trying again.
Thanks for the advise, that is something I should really think about since I am only going to have a few chickens in the first place.
 
the EE's should have beards and muffs, but if it was a hatchery choice bin, it's most likely all roosters.
You might be better of buying older chicks from a breeder, you can usually tell gender on most breeds at about a month old.
 
If I'm going to pay feed store prices for chicks I sure as heck want to know what I'm getting. I hate those "mixed pullets" type of deals. That's just cheap on the part of the store.
 
Oh, I'm so sorry you've been having such a difficult time with the shipped eggs. You are not alone. And you do need to get some chicks now so that they'll be laying before winter. Hatched right now, they'll likely lay around late September. So, yeah, there's no time like the present to get your chicks. And sometimes there aren't many options depending on where you live.

Do try Craig's List because you can get some breeds that you'll know what they are and if they're decent layers. Plus, you will likely get local chicks so then you know that they have a good chance to do well in your location weather-wise (hot or cold weather). There are no chicks in my local area on Craig's List, so if you're area is like that, then the feed store is looking like a pretty good option right now.

So, hopefully the feed store has a few bins that are marked with breed and gender. If the unmarked bins is all you've got, then hopefully, they're marked "pullets."

I'm not very good at this, but I'll tell what little I know. Hopefully others will help with what they know because you may be out of options, optimism, and money (after buying shipped eggs and poor results).

Take your hatchery catalog with you if you have one. The photos it contains of the chicks can be invaluable. Call for a catalog today and then you'll have one for next year.

A black bird with a white dot on its head is likely a Barred Rock. The ones with the blacker legs are usually the girls. They do lay well almost always. Some are perfectly friendly, some a little bit bossy, and some a little noisier than others, which means they are regular chickens. They could also be Dominiques.

The black chickens with the white belly and a little on the wings might be a Australorp. Know for being good layers. The white might have a light yellow tinge to it.

The puffy cheeks, which you can see if you can stare the chicken right in the face, are usually going to be a green egg layer. Some people call them Easter Eggers. Winter hardy and good layers almost always.

A little nob on the top of the head is often a Polish which lay a white egg usually and need trimming of their crests (head plumes) because they can't see because the feathers hang down over their faces. Have to watch for bugs in their crests.

The ones that have marbled backs (black, yellow, white, brown, gray, rust) are likely Campines. They lay small white eggs and are flighty.

The ones that are white all over with maybe one or two black circular dots placed randomly are Austra Whites from Dunlap. The Austra White is a Australorp and Leghorn cross and are supposed to be great layers. Usually large combs need some Vaseline (or organic alternative) on comb once a week in freezing weather to avoid frostbite. California White may also be similar, but I can't remember, I think they may be yellow with a random black dot or two.

The chipmunk stripes ... you want the more defined line because they are more often girls. I read that in some chicken book somewhere, but who knows the validity? The Speckled Sussex are really dark as opposed to the light yellow on some chipmunk birds, but I'm not sure this is true in every case.

Yellow chickens are usually a good bet and are often a Production Red of some sort and this could also be the rusty red you are talking about. But you might get a Buff Orpington or two or maybe a White Rock or Delaware with the yellow birds.

The yellow with the gray birds you mention sound possibly like White Orpingtons, but stare them in the face and see if they're not green eggs layers with the puffy cheeks. A lot of green eggs layers have a blue/gray undertone. The White Orp chicks I've seen are basically light yellow and have little gray patches here and there all over them and not in a pattern. End up white. Good layer.

Okay, that's the best I can do. I could be wrong on any of the above points. If you're desperate, which it sounds like you might be, then that might help.

I will agree with the person who said something like life's too short to spend it on chickens you don't enjoy. But sometimes you run out of options and sometimes you don't know what you like or don't like until you've tried them out for a few years. Or come fall, you could always give them away on Craig's List. I see quite a few requests for full grown hens on Craig's List. Next year, you'll know exactly what you want and can order some hatching eggs from a breeder to put in your incubator.

Truth be told, I'm not sure what to think of the whole assortment bin idea for the feed store except that I can get a couple of new breeds that I wouldn't be able to try out otherwise because I just don't need a whole bunch of Brahmas running around. So that's what I'm trying out. I hear they're really calm and a reasonable layer. We'll see.

Now, spill. What's in your incubator?!
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Thank you all for the advise and helpful info. I will be looking for fluffy faces now
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I stopped by a small feed store to see what they might have in chicks and they had a bin marked Silver Lace Wyandotte pullets... so I got two. Right now they are in the brooder in the living room scratching and pecking around, they have been non-stop since I brought them home. The mixed bin at the big feed store (Big R) has "pullets" under it, but who knows for sure, right?

Currently in my bator I have 4 BLRW, 5 Golden Lakenvelder, 5 Andalusian (2 of which are Blues), 4 Welsummers and 4 Wheaten Marans, and 2 Light Sussex that I really should give up on. I have lost 44 eggs, not one hatched, very few even developed, of the 8 Sussex these two show the most development but my lack of humidity has damaged them too.
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I never gave the humidity around here much thought. I had water in one of the trays and thought that would be enough. Once I got the temps to stay stable and the Sussex weren't developing as they should I decided to get a humidity reader from Walmart. I put a battery in it for the drive home to make sure it was going to work, the humidity in the truck was 13% HOLY COW!!
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I never realized it was so dry! So with this current batch I am keeping the trays full of water and a wet paper towel or two. I got the humidity up to 50% at one time for a short while. I have a piece of wood soaking in water, when lockdown time comes I will put it in there and hopefully raise the humidity. I have been leaving the vent pugs out for now, I want air to circulate since I put the bator in the closet to keep the temp more stable.

On Craigslist and the AmericanClassifieds I have seen more chickens 'wanted' than anything else. I have not seen any chicks for sale.

I am wanting chickens more because I just like watching them and working outside with them around. We aren't much of egg eaters and it is going to be really hard to get the DH to eat one of them if I cull any. Although I do plan on making more egg dishes for dinner once we have fresh eggs everyday, and I have friends that want to buy some eggs and there are some older folks I want to give eggs to. I shall keep looking at chicks, and watching my eggs.

Again, thanks for the help. Wish me luck
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Can't figure out how to post pics yet.....
 
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You have a fun mix in the incubator. I'll keep my fingers crossed for you. Once you get used to incubating, you'll wonder why you ever had any trouble. I finally gave up on my styrofoam incubator which wouldn't maintain the temperature and bought a Brinsea. Much easier for me.

Your Wyandottes are little cuties.
 

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