I have a brooder set up for them in case these leghorns don't make the best moms. I have a coop now, and the meterials to start my next coop. I'll have a deadline coming up pretty soon to get this new coop finished now.
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I have a brooder set up for them in case these leghorns don't make the best moms. I have a coop now, and the meterials to start my next coop. I'll have a deadline coming up pretty soon to get this new coop finished now.
I think Ideal Hatchery carries them.
cant be c-u-t-e-r than this naked neck buff chick..
You might check the genetics breeding threads on BYC or check with Danne Honour on this Buff Leghorn thread (a few posts backward on here) and ask him. I think it would take several generations to completely get the EE characteristics to get bred out before it can be considered a Buff Leghorn.I am not a fan if the naked neck chickens, but this is a great pic!!!
@Sylvester017
These buff colored chicks are not from the broody hens. We built our own incubater, and these chicks were our test run. They hatched on the 9th. The broody girls each have one of those cream colored eggs, along with eggs from my Cockoo Maren hens. So I have a shot at two more. Those ladies are "due" next Monday and Wednesday.
The Daddy is the EE Roo. This guy.
If I breed a Roo from this batch back to my first gen. Buff Leghorn ladies would their offspring be considered Buff Leghorns?