Black laced red wyandotte

Kimamanda

In the Brooder
Apr 11, 2020
15
31
39
I got 3 baby chicks that are now 5 weeks old. Two lavender orpingtons and one
black laced red wyandotte. I am concerned if my wyandotte is a female or male. I live in city limits and cannot have a roo. I really need feed back!
20200411_094232.jpg
20200411_094136.jpg
 
Yeah, looks a bit male. That comb is pretty red for 5 weeks. You'll know for sure in a couple more weeks.
How is that? I'm fairly new with chicks we have 3 girls outside which we've had for about a year but as far as our chicks we got them at just 4 days old and were told that they were all female. It would be upsetting if she was a he.☹
 
How is that? I'm fairly new with chicks we have 3 girls outside which we've had for about a year but as far as our chicks we got them at just 4 days old and were told that they were all female. It would be upsetting if she was a he.☹
Meaning how will I know in a couple weeks?
 
How is that?
The red color in the comb and the wattles starting to grow.
Females will of course grow wattles and combs too, but the red color appears much later in females. The wattles also appear sooner on males. For a 5-week-old, that's a lot of wattles and red color.

Some hatcheries claim a 95% accurate sexing rate, but in my experience it's rarely better than 80%. It's best to assume that about 20% of 'female' chicks will be male. (Then you're pleasantly surprised if they're not.) Sorry you can't keep him. Wyandottes make lovely roosters.

And I'd wait a couple more weeks before killing or rehoming him... just in case he's a very masculine lady.
 
The red color in the comb and the wattles starting to grow.
Females will of course grow wattles and combs too, but the red color appears much later in females. The wattles also appear sooner on males. For a 5-week-old, that's a lot of wattles and red color.

Some hatcheries claim a 95% accurate sexing rate, but in my experience it's rarely better than 80%. It's best to assume that about 20% of 'female' chicks will be male. (Then you're pleasantly surprised if they're not.) Sorry you can't keep him. Wyandottes make lovely roosters.

And I'd wait a couple more weeks before killing or rehoming him... just in case he's a very masculine lady.
No,I definitely wouldn't kill him/ her. It would just be devastating to have to get rid of because we've grown an attachment to him/her. I'm just going to be optimistic I guess. Thanks for your help
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom