If your "orange" BC has very pale shanks, he could be BTB. They are wheaten based, and wheaten shanks clear up really well with the ID gene compared to ER based birds.
But you'd have to have a BC hen and roo that carry wheaten and one of them has to have Db.
I doubt that's the case if you've never had any wheatens.
Don - in your dark to dark matings were you targeting hens or roos, or just hoping to get anything decent from it - something without white in wing/hackle?
- And as far as your roo that you'd hoped would put more color into his offspring - did he have good color balance or was he himself over coppered? Were you looking for him to put more color on the hens?
Isn't there a camp out there that says some of their juvies with brown feathers molted out to be clear black? Do both exist out there - lines that are "once brown always brown" and also lines that can start brown but end up with good solid black?
just trying to take some notes here and learn from what everyone's doing.
But you'd have to have a BC hen and roo that carry wheaten and one of them has to have Db.
I doubt that's the case if you've never had any wheatens.
Don - in your dark to dark matings were you targeting hens or roos, or just hoping to get anything decent from it - something without white in wing/hackle?
- And as far as your roo that you'd hoped would put more color into his offspring - did he have good color balance or was he himself over coppered? Were you looking for him to put more color on the hens?
Isn't there a camp out there that says some of their juvies with brown feathers molted out to be clear black? Do both exist out there - lines that are "once brown always brown" and also lines that can start brown but end up with good solid black?
just trying to take some notes here and learn from what everyone's doing.