Cream legbar hatching eggs

LaserDaiser

In the Brooder
Joined
Sep 24, 2024
Messages
9
Reaction score
1
Points
14
Hi there! I’m just getting into breeding and selling crested cream legbar hatching eggs. My hens are a mix from other local breeders, (who don’t sell hatching eggs, so nothing to go off of there) and from Murray mcmurray hatchery. My roosters however, come from green fires exhibition line and have been tested for, and carry the blue egg gene. They should not throw green egg laying offspring. With this information in mind, and me being a complete newby, any thoughts on what a fair price might be for a dozen hatching eggs?
 
When you say your hens are a mix, did you mean a mix of breeds, or a mix of lines?

When you had your roo tested, was he heterozygous or homozygous for the blue egg gene?

Technically, green eggs are blue eggs. They just also have brown tint, a whole separate bunch of genes.
A chicken can be homozygous for the blue egg gene and still produce green eggs.
And brown egg genes being what they are, they can show up later on in a blue laying flock.
The best way to be sure what you are offering is to test hatch. Raise a hundred pullets to maturity and check their egg color.

How does your stock compare when it comes to type for the breed? (conformation, size, feather color, dermal pigment, etc.)
 
They are a mix from different genetic lines. Not a mix of breeds. They are 100% crested cream leg bars, all of them.

I did not personally have the roosters tested. When I purchased them, I was told they had no chance of passing “green” egg genes along. That it was only blue. So was assuming homozygous. Either way, they are from a good line and I trust the breeder I got them from.

The males I know conform well to the “SOP” for the breed. Starting out, the females mostly conform. Feathers are mostly the colors and patterned how they should be with a few slight differences here and there that might be considered “less than desirable traits”. Legs are yellow and skin is light when I look under the feathers. I will be breeding in and out what I want over time. At this point I fully expect to reasonably charge less as I’m just getting started and they might not perfectly meet breed standards.
 
As soon as I get my breeding coop set up and I can get them separated out to make sure they are not intermingling with my other roosters, I fully plan to test hatch a batch
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom