- Dec 31, 2011
- 59
- 2
- 41
hmmmmmmmm. I was kind of hoping the females would be white...but that's very interesting. I'm definitely going to do this. Thank you. 

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If you want light female use a light male over Buff female. Always use a male in the color you want to work withhmmmmmmmm. I was kind of hoping the females would be white...but that's very interesting. I'm definitely going to do this. Thank you.![]()
I'm finding the VHs are pretty easy to cull for in my Bantam Darks. The VHs are immediatly apparant when the chicks start to feather. I hatched about 40 total and culled down to 5 pretty quickly. Jimmy Rust says his this years hatch is about 95%VH free. They are pretty hard to get rid of as many birds do carry a recessive copy. Ruthless culling is key.That's fine in your own personal flock. It's when people decide to sell, or give away birds carrying this recessive fault that further degrades the variety. I am guilty of it as well. If I could go back in time, I would have held off another couple years before allowing any silver laced off my place. I thought I had bred the vulture hocks out, but apparently a male I used still carried a hidden copy. This resulted in some vulture hocked birds being out there, which would have been correctable with proper breeding, culling, and time. Which seems to be a lot to expect of some folks.
Still look a bit young. I like the heads on the females and the top line on the lone female in the second photo. The male still looks a bit green. Males are a little slower to mature in the bantam buffs in my opinion. You are sure enough on the right track.
Can someone explain or show pictures of Vulture Hocks and Good Hocks?
Thanks