Look at those tufts!
Sorry about your chick Lanae. what a disappointment.

Sorry about your chick Lanae. what a disappointment.

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What you are talking about it fairly rare. Yes, we can see hidden or internal tufts or, more commonly, tufts picked out and the bird thought to be clean-faced, but it is a myth perpetuated by backyard breeders of araucanas trying to sell eggs that clean-faced birds "carry the tufting gene." If you want tufts, better make sure at least one parent has them. Choose your clean-faced breeders carefully- this is where you have a chance to make good selections based on type and color. Tuft size in a breeder is not nearly as important as tuft placement. Tuft size is largely random, tuft placement is inherited. Do not breed from a bird with misplaced tufts (one high, one low) if there is any selection at all. Although not listed in the standard, I try to breed for high, even, upswept tufts (though I'm not above showing a bird with big, low tufts) these stay so much cleaner and are much more attractive, especially here in muddy Washington.Not to nitpick, but there is a slightly less than 50% chance of getting tufted chickes from a tufted mated to a non tufted. That is because the dominant tufting gene has reduced penetrance, meaning that a chick will inherit the tufting gene but may not have tufts.
Which is another reason to breed cleanfaced- they may actually have the tufting gene, but not have tufts.
HTH?