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Yes, I qualify, 4 of my fingers; I admit it could be 3 fingers on some folks and perhaps 5 with someone else. Just consistently use the same fingers so the comparison is the same. You'll find most pullets are about the same with an exceptional one or lesser one here & there.
She lays a large egg. Comparing the width between the pelvic bones when a hen is in lay will give you an idea of egg size. People who have gotten hatching eggs from me always tell me they think my hens' eggs are large. What surprises me is that some of my pullets' first eggs can be large rather than gradually increasing in size as they mature. Reminds me, I was at a show and there were some really nice New Hampshires there. The N.H. hens were huge, big-bodied. One of them had laid an egg in the show pen & the egg was so small, I couldn't believe that big hen had laid that little egg (and she was a HEN, not a pullet!) -- so their anatomy does matter in regards to size of eggs.
Yes, Marengoite is correct, the Hogan method is what I was referring which is what ALBC used when recovering the Buckeye. The book (Call of the Hen) is detailed and shows pictures of what I am trying to describe. I started using these methods in earnest in 2007 when I went to Schrider's N.C. farm for an ALBC work shop; it helped to have him actually point things out to me. There were Dominiques and Buckeyes there for hands-on teaching/ learning. Since then, Schrider has taken the time to answer my questions and also show me things when I see him at the shows.
Yes, I qualify, 4 of my fingers; I admit it could be 3 fingers on some folks and perhaps 5 with someone else. Just consistently use the same fingers so the comparison is the same. You'll find most pullets are about the same with an exceptional one or lesser one here & there.
She lays a large egg. Comparing the width between the pelvic bones when a hen is in lay will give you an idea of egg size. People who have gotten hatching eggs from me always tell me they think my hens' eggs are large. What surprises me is that some of my pullets' first eggs can be large rather than gradually increasing in size as they mature. Reminds me, I was at a show and there were some really nice New Hampshires there. The N.H. hens were huge, big-bodied. One of them had laid an egg in the show pen & the egg was so small, I couldn't believe that big hen had laid that little egg (and she was a HEN, not a pullet!) -- so their anatomy does matter in regards to size of eggs.
Yes, Marengoite is correct, the Hogan method is what I was referring which is what ALBC used when recovering the Buckeye. The book (Call of the Hen) is detailed and shows pictures of what I am trying to describe. I started using these methods in earnest in 2007 when I went to Schrider's N.C. farm for an ALBC work shop; it helped to have him actually point things out to me. There were Dominiques and Buckeyes there for hands-on teaching/ learning. Since then, Schrider has taken the time to answer my questions and also show me things when I see him at the shows.