AwesomeAraucana.com...anyone have any experience with it?

Well it isn't impossible to get a pink egg because some of the ancestors of the Aruacana'a (Collana's, Sweet Potato Quetche) sometime lay a pink egg. But it does mean that you have lost the blue gene. The blue is dominant so it only takes one copy for the hen to lay blue. The problem is if you breed her to a roo who also only has one blue gene 25% of the offspring will be double gened for blue eggs (homozygous, OO), 50% will be single gened for blue eggs (heterozygous, Oo), and 25% will not lay a blue egg (homozygous, oo). The "O" and the "o" are the symbol for the blue gene or the lack of blue gene.

The gene that causes the pink color is a different gene and when combined with the blue gene you will get pale green eggs. I am not sure if the pink is just a diluted brown gene or different entirely. I haven't dug that far into the genetics of brown eggs yet. If you would like to read some very fascinating history on the origins of the Aruacana's ancestors check out Yashar's BIN page in the Auction forum. Also of read up on Jungle Fowl here on BYC and how they came across the Pacific to Chile. Scientist are currently tracing human migrations by looking at chicken DNA! The chicken DNA proves Thor Heyerdahl was right that ancient people did cross the Pacific in primitive boats. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thor_Heyerdahl

Now then I just have to add this story. I have been twice in my life to the Cowboy Hall of Fame. Once as a kid and again when I was 19. It is in Oklahoma City by the way and is one of the best museums I have ever been to. If you like American Western art and history put this one on your Bucket List. Both times there was a security guard standing duty there. He was a marvelous story teller as well as being a security guard. There was a painting of two Southwestern Indian women (probably Pueblos), mother and daughter working on weaving a rug. He tells of a man from Iraq who came to see the museum and stops cold in front of the painting, stunned. The guard asks if he is alright. He said yes, it was just that the two women weaving the rug in front of a mud house were dead ringers for his mother and sister and the pattern of the rug is a common pattern in his home country and even the house looked like his her house.

Now what does that have to do with chicken's you ask? There is a rare breed called the Manx Rumpy or more accurately the Persian Rumpless (Iraq/Iran made up old Persia). It dose not lay a blue egg but it has no tail. But I find it thrilling to think that with the other cultural parallels as well as the human phenotype match between these American Indians and this man's mother and sister that possibly they had common ancestors and one group went west from the general Indochina region and the other went East across the Pacific.

Who knows what they will find when they finish charting human migration with chicken genes? If you do go to the Cowboy Hall of Fame I really doubt you will get to meet the guard. He was over 65 the last time I went and it has been at least 30 years. However maybe he passed the story on to his replacement guard. It is an good story.
 
Aloha,

I have received eggs from Awesome Eddie. He is a super nice guy, who sent me extra eggs when I burned my first batch. He is totally fair. As you read his story, his earlier birds are from questionable lineage, but he has since mixed in a lot of good quality birds since then. Heʻs been breeding araucanas for about 40 years. My chicks are so freakin cute. Iʻll try to post some pics later.

Aloha, Puhi
 
Hatch Day Update... Our hatch day was Sunday ... On lockdown day they were taken off the turner & candled. 12 were seemingly fertile, viable or wiggling eggs. The others were about half & half, either infertile or early death. With high hopes, the rest were set for lockdown, humidity raised, temps stable the entire cycle. Saturday around 3am we heard chirping in the incubator. Soon after we had 3 pips. It seemed to take forever, we went about business Saturday trying not to obsess. Saturday evening we finally had a zip, soon after, chick one came out kicking!!! Healthy, strong, yolk fully absorbed. During the wait we had a 4th pip and number one kicked an egg over that we noticed had pipped upside down, wrong end of egg and was dead. 2 and 3 came out close to midnight Saturday evening. They struggled more, were a bit smaller but healthy and had absorbed yolk fully. The 4th little guy... it got late into sunday evening, he seemed to be weakening so we took him out and carefully followed the assistance guidelines over the next few hours. In the end, he is alive, smallest of them, eyes a little swollen (probably from pressure). His feet were over head and stuck tight in membrane. We have been giving him water dips with prednisone and electrolytes and he is hanging in there, up and chirping but weak. No signs of anything from the other eggs all day, some had chirped but never pipped. We will leave them another couple days just to be sure.
I am sure the postal roller coaster ride is at fault, but there are 4 cuties here. Thanks for reading everyone and if there is any lesson to be learned I would caution about the hazards to eggs during shipping. I will post pics soon and updates on the other eggs.
 
Aloha, I had 7 hatch. One died early. 3 whites, 3 duckwing. 3 tufted, 3 not.

But a pure white double tufted and my baby runt who wouldnʻt grow, disappeared yesterday. Mongoose I think. I will have my revenge! They were too young to let out, even for 1 hour.

Iʻll put pics up later.

kden, Puhi
 




The 3 araucana chicks from "24 araucana hatching eggs" on ebay sold by awesome araucana. When contacted about the results of the hatch Edd had offerred to send a new batch of eggs since the post mangled the 1st ones so badly. I don't know if he will or not, we haven't heard from him in almost a week. These cuties are doing well though. Good luck everyone.
 
Aloha,

Edd might need to be reminded. But if he offered, he will send more. I paid for the shipping and he sent me like 60 more and about 10 were damaged. Good thing I have 2 incubators. I had only 6 last time, 3 had tufts. My friend hatched the 6. I had 40 in my incubator and on 2 different days, the temp went up to 103 and there were about 15 fully developed chicks that didn't hatch. My fault, yet he sent me more eggs. He's not trying to make money, he wants to share.


These are kind of old. I'll try to get more.

Aloha, Puhi
 
Pretty birds and i'm glad it worked out for you. However, I did remind Edd and after waiting nearly 3 weeks to hear something, he simply replied "no eggs". It's always a gamble I suppose having eggs shipped. Good luck everyone
 






My 4 babies from Edd. I had two others that were tufted but they got killed. One was pure white with huge tufts. These are the four I have left. The second one is the roo. He has tufts. My favorite now is the green legged duckwing.

Aloha, Puhi
 

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