Ok!A friend has offered to teach us how to butcher the roosters.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Ok!A friend has offered to teach us how to butcher the roosters.
@3KillerBs You have been so helpful to me in the past. Can you help out again here? Do you have anything to add or change?
The updated photos have them aged between 13-16 weeksHow old are they now?
After 10-12 weeks I look for the male saddle feathers (later for slower-maturing breeds). I put my hand or a piece of paper under the saddle feathers to see their true shape without being confused by patterning.
![]()
The updated photos have them aged between 13-16 weeks
So I guess the question is to identify by feather do they need both hackles and saddles to be pointy? Or can they be female and still have long thin ish hackles?
Then few have saddles other than #8 and my Roo named King (not part of this thread).I consider the saddles the most reliable. Hackles are less distinctive, IMO.
EEs are known to sometimes have thinner hackles and the patterning on the hackles can be deceptive, making them appear pointed when they're actually round if you look at an individual feather against a contrasting background.
Though if I am understanding cockerel behavour and grabbing the necks of pullets with their beaks and refusing to let go, then I can confirm cockerels that way?
Is the red feather and the green feathers a good way to guess as well? I think pullets are always plain and rooster are beautiful and colourful.
Thank you for taking time to answer my question.That's a dominance behavior, not necessarily restricted to males, though likely to be seen in hormonal, young cockerels.
Red patches on the shoulders are often a male trait, but green iridescence on black occurs in both sexes.