All five of my Delawares had pinched tails. So I sold themI have seen a couple hatchery Delawares that were decent enough to work with, but that's an exception rather than the norm. If you have one with a wide, tepee tail, hang onto her.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
All five of my Delawares had pinched tails. So I sold themI have seen a couple hatchery Delawares that were decent enough to work with, but that's an exception rather than the norm. If you have one with a wide, tepee tail, hang onto her.
here's a couple roosters that are the same age and I'm deciding which one to keep. one has very dark arched tail feathers that are tightly grouped and the other has tail feathers that are not grouped and more light in color.
they are very close in size. haven't counted point on there combs yet. one on right has bigger comb and wattles.
Ol IKE has the comb of perfection - Are IKE and ISAAC from the same hatch ?
Well that clears up my confusion - You reckon the girls were trying to get him to " SOP" or he just got hen pecked ? LOLIke is just Isaac's nickname. Same guy. Isaac had a pesky 6th half point in his comb, and his picking hens divested him of his sharpest points, bad things, but someone did tell me, maybe it was Walt Leonard, that he had a near perfect head on him. To add a breeding point, he does have slightly too long earlobes.
His son, Gabriel, with my mixed breed red hen had a 5 pointer and other than some stray red feathers and streaks, he was a really great looking Delaware. No one would have known he was a cross other than the few red streaks.
I rehomed Gabriel, no place for him, but if I was still breeding and had more Delaware hens, he might have been put in the breeding pool to see if the red streaks passed on. In Gabriel's son he sired before he left with a Rock hen, who looked like a Columbian Rock, the red did NOT pass on, so it might have worked.
Breeding decisions are entirely up to the breeder and some purists would say not to do it, some say "why not?". I have none of Kathy's and haven't tried it, but I know some folks have-heard it through the grapevine. There are good points to both, certainly. The leg color on my line is spectacular, generally. They don't tend to yellow, though I have a good bit of shade here, but they don't have pen covers and when they're outside, they're out in the sun, however much gets to them. The temperament is fabulous, and to me, that's part of the breed trait.Well that clears up my confusion - You reckon the girls were trying to get him to " SOP" or he just got hen pecked ? LOL
I have wondered what we would get crossing your line with Kathys
I would keep him and see how he looked after Juvie molt then reasess. Have culled myself into a corner too many times for no good reason other than that I am a perfectionist and haven't wanted to justify feed and space. Always learning and I have made too many culling mistakes. Delawares are not easy. JMOI tried to take more photos today of this chick, who will be 8 weeks old Tuesday. It's hard with a squirming chick and a bad camera, sort of like snapping a picture of a zizagging red dot on a laser pointer, but the hackles seem just too dark to me. Yes, he has a very broad shape, nice head and carriage, but this guy has more smut on him than any I remember in the past, even out of Georgie. If you had to make a call NOW, would you keep or cull Asa here in an SOP Delaware breeding program? Yes, I know it's early, but so far, he has no barring in the hackles. Tail feathers are coming in, wispy, but barred.
*** he does not have any brown on him, that is Georgia clay from a dustbath, LOL.
![]()