Quote: Pics, FINALLY!!!! Healthy, beautiful flock, congrats![]()
And hush you take fine pics! Guineas are not the most easiest of birds to get pics of. Believe me, I know, lol. Plus I agree, digital cameras make taking pics of Guineas extremely difficult, I struggle with it every time. I click, they move, and "the perfect shot" is missed, Grrrr. If your camera has the "burst" option that can help a lot, it takes multiple pictures with one press of the shutter button.
The Buff Hen looks really good to me, a real pretty girl with some darker feathers mixed in here and there (IMO, she's probably got some Chocolate in her). Can't tell that she was ever smaller than the others, so pat yourself on the back for such an excellent job getting her caught up and all healthy like the rest of the flock! The dark Chocolate Hens of course you know I love love love![]()
Your White I'm sorry to say tho... is not a WhiteI see pearling on the lower chest area and all along the flanks, and faintly on the back and upper wings too. Pure Whites have zero pearling at all. From the pics I'm not sure if the bird is partially pearled or fully pearled, since the base color is so light and the pearling is harder to see, plus it is still so young and younger partially birds still have a lot of pearling until they molt out of their last set of juvenile feathers.![]()
So if it's just partially pearled it could be an Opaline (which would be good, resulting in more colorful hatches since it carries both the tan/brown and blue color genes) or it could be a really light Buff (that would be ok too, but the hatches probably won't be quite as colorful).
If it turns out to be fully pearled then it could be a Porcelain or a really light Buff Dundotte. (I'm leaning towards one of these fully pearled colors just from what I can see of it in the pics, but I can't tell which one without seeing pics of the feathers in better light, or in person tho). If it does turn out to be fully pearled and it is positively a male then a lot of the keets from whatever Hen or Hens he breeds will be fully pearled, if not all of them. (It may or may not be carrying the recessive partially pearled gene). How colorful the hatches will be will again depend on what color the bird actually is, and which recessive hidden genes it's carrying.
Is your Pearl Grey a Hen or male? Did you see any other birds from the flocks those 2 came from? Just curious what other color and pearling genes may be floating around in their background.