Araucana chick with silky feathers?

very interesting.....I have silkies....araucanas.....ameraucanas......I should try.......
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Looks to be a silkieXaraucana; one variation of an Easter Egger. Very pretty colouring. She has more than one generation of silkie in her to have acquired silkie feathers.

If she lays a blue egg you could try breeding the trait into a line of grey or partridge silkies. She looks to be grey with autosomal red.
 
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We ordered it through Southern States. I don't remember where they ordered them from. I will have to check.

I understand what EE means but what does BO mean?
 
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We ordered it through Southern States. I don't remember where they ordered them from. I will have to check.

I understand what EE means but what does BO mean?

Never heard of Southern States, I'm guessing it's a local feed store?

BO = buff orp
 
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Green legs suggests she might be an EE. Probably has Silkie in her blood to get that pretty feathering. She'll be a great bird and awesome layer I am sure! If you don't want her, you can send her to me!
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ETA: I changed my green leg statement to
. Sonoran Silkies is correct. There are purebreds of other breeds that can have green legs as well.
 
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You do not need more then 1 generation of silkie in the background to get silkie feathering. This is a mutation and you just need the gene. I once had a half silkie, half jap rooster (regular feathering)that I breed to half jap, half cochin with no silkie lineage in her back ground. I did hatch a silkie chick from this cross that looked pure silkie in every way except for the yellow legs, pink skin, red walnut comb and 4 toes . I gave it to a friend who breed it to a pure silkie who's offspring were all 100% silkie feathered. I have also crossed pure silkie to other breeds and every once in a while got a silkie feathered chick. If this were true, silkie seramas would have silkie features besides feathers.
 
The silkie gene is recessive. A bird has to have two copies for the trait to show. All chickens with silkie feathers have two copies of h. Yes, it could be a random mutation, aka sport, but that would be fairly uncommon. A recessive gene can lurk and hide for generations.

There are quite a few breeds and varieties with willow legs; it doesn;t ID the bird as an Easter Egger. Indeed, there is no standard for an Easter Egger, and there is no relationship between leg colour and eggshell colour.
 
Not true. Many true araucana breeders use tailed birds in their breeding pens. Ditto for birds without tufts. The birds exhibited, however should be rumpless and tufted; otherwise they will be DQed.
 

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