Can i ask what made you say that she was a he? Normally production breeds have big combs at 18 weeks.add a pic of one you know is a hen then I can tell you the wattle and comb say roo but the tail says hen I say roo
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Can i ask what made you say that she was a he? Normally production breeds have big combs at 18 weeks.add a pic of one you know is a hen then I can tell you the wattle and comb say roo but the tail says hen I say roo
I think pullet toThis is my other of the same breed I'm not sure which one of these (hopefully both) is a hen but one of them is laying ...my other 2 are golden comets who have been actively laying for 2 weeks and this egg does not belong to them. Thanks
This is also a pullet bordering on egg laying.This is my other of the same breed I'm not sure which one of these (hopefully both) is a hen but one of them is laying ...my other 2 are golden comets who have been actively laying for 2 weeks and this egg does not belong to them. Thanks
No this is what a cinnamon queen looks likeCinnamon queen pullets
I was gonna say this too. And yes a pullet.For the breed she's a New Hampshire Red.
I was thinking CQ too because of the other ones comb, but they don't really look like CQ so I'm not sure.Cinnamon queen pullets
Thank you tsc had them marked as cinnamon queens and Rhode island's in the same bin ...not surprised they turned out to be neither!For the breed she's a New Hampshire Red.
Cinnamon queens are a red sex link hybrid. Red sex links can be created with many different breeds, meaning they don’t all look the same.No this is what a cinnamon queen looks likeView attachment 3198514