- Thread starter
- #21
Simms Chickens
In the Brooder
- Sep 26, 2018
- 10
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Might I assume there’s a consensus she will be ok in the Colorado winters?
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So long as you have a good coop with ventilation holes at top but otherwise air tight, I think she will be fine, as long as there are other chickens with her to huddle up with. Insulation might be a good idea, if possible.Might I assume there’s a consensus she will be ok in the Colorado winters?
Absolutely not, she'll freeze. She needs to be shipped to sunny California ASAP! Joke, I'm sure she be fine, but if you ever want to get rid of her, let me know. She's stunning.Might I assume there’s a consensus she will be ok in the Colorado winters?
Absolutely not, she'll freeze. She needs to be shipped to sunny California ASAP! Joke, I'm sure she be fine, but if you ever want to get rid of her, let me know. She's stunning.
This person is very knowledgeable.Well if I may chime in here....
Feed stores tend to source their chicks from either local breeders or hatcheries. My guess is she came from a show breeder that probably didn't segregate his colors into different breeding pens. Maybe that is why they sold to the feed store. But
Anywho, I digress.
I speculate that she is indeed a Dutch Bantam but possesses a few key color genes.
Certainly, she has the mottle gene in her. But, not quite the normal mottle gene. I believe she has what is called "hysterical mottling" which is the same form found in Anconas and Exchequer Leghorns.
I also believe that, like a Golden Neck D'Uccle, she has 1 copy of dominant white.
So, what this would theoretically make is a hysterically mottled bird with the dull buff and white speckling/filling of a golden neck.
If you breed her to a Mille Fleur I would expect to her to throw 50% MF chicks and 50% Golden Necks.
Hope this helps![]()