- Mar 18, 2012
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Very cute! Are you planning to keep any pullets? I am a fan of the spotted one. Did she tell you what color variety of Wyandotte is in the mix?
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Quote: I'm not involved in this, but thanks for posting that chart, Ron! I've always needed something like that.
I had to go outside and look at our Delaware hen (Miss Wibbles) after seeing these pics.Sounds like you have a great plan in place. I look forward to seeing how your Silver Sussex and the rest do. Yes, my Dels come from @capayvalleychick . They are culls from her breeding program she has been raising Dels for years and her original birds I believe came from Land of Tobe (Braden) and Sand Hill. She started breeding to SOP a couple of years ago and I have a rooster and a hen from her. She got some really amazing chicks last spring from another source so she got rid most of her own original line. Lucky me.![]()
I also have a couple of hatchery girls but one rarely lays...I think she is an internal layer...they other consistently gives me a medium sized pink egg. My breeder girl, Harriet, lays a to XL egg. I set a clutch of Harriet's eggs on Saturday. Most should be Dels because she lives with Ozzie but there will probably be a few red Sex links in there too since I also have a NH roo who sometimes ranges with her.
This is Harriet after our first rain
Harriet and Ozzie with Dottie in the back...Dottie is a hatchery girl
Dottie and Ozzie
Ozzie last summer
Ozzie and my internal layer Della
Ozzie is much more filled out now but this gives you an idea of his coloring.
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I don;t really know what the parent colors are ....only that they are supoosed to be Cornish/Rock/Wyandotte crosses. I sent pics to the person I bought the eggs from and she said this:
"The yellow ones will be white with spots either blue or black..as adults they will be all white like a cornish. The dark ones will probably look like dark wyandotte's. The one with brown through it will have broken lace and be quite pretty too."
Keep us updated on what they feather out to look like. It does not sound like blue genetics if they will be white as adults though.I don;t really know what the parent colors are ....only that they are supoosed to be Cornish/Rock/Wyandotte crosses. I sent pics to the person I bought the eggs from and she said this:
"The yellow ones will be white with spots either blue or black..as adults they will be all white like a cornish. The dark ones will probably look like dark wyandotte's. The one with brown through it will have broken lace and be quite pretty too."
I don;t really know what the parent colors are ....only that they are supoosed to be Cornish/Rock/Wyandotte crosses. I sent pics to the person I bought the eggs from and she said this:
"The yellow ones will be white with spots either blue or black..as adults they will be all white like a cornish. The dark ones will probably look like dark wyandotte's. The one with brown through it will have broken lace and be quite pretty too."
Let me ask a newbie question. What is the reasoning behind trio's.
I was just reading a bunch of stuff on how sexing and genetics works differently in birds than mammals. Was thinking that it also might also have something to do with Hens liking to have a buddy and possible broodiness.There are probably many more but these spring to mind:
More genetic diversity than a pair...less wear and tear on the girls if they are confined to a pen with one rooster...One hen may have a stronger shape, another stronger coloring and you may want to ultimately breed their off spring and breeding half siblings is generally better (I think) than breeding siblings.