Here is a video of the flock when the Legbars were 7 months old. The first Legbar cockerel out of the door is one I decided not to keep. He wasn't respected by the girls and never learned to crow right. It was a very strange and annoying sound he made, even thought he was otherwise very sweet. He had more black in his tail and belly. The one I kept (pictures in prior post) comes out at :35 in the video, followed by my favorite Legbar pullet (at :46) and then the 2nd Legbar pullet, which has turned out to be a better egg producer (at 1:01, in the background).
Here is the 2nd pullet, more recently. She's a good producer of beautiful blue eggs. I just hatched 2 of her eggs, sired by a Golden Appenzeller Spitzhauben Rooster. I originally had her in the breeding pen with the Legbar roo, but she kept escaping so I decided to let her stay with the Spitz for this hatch. The other pullet stopped laying right when I decided to start collecting eggs to hatch, and this one stopped laying shortly thereafter.
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I'm hoping to breed my 2 remaining pullets with the above rooster sometime in 2021, once the girls start laying again.
Here are the 2 pullets I let go...
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They were laying beautiful eggs, but I was worried about their longevity in a free range flock with hawks around, given their impaired vision. How would oversized crest and/or super floppy-in-the-eyes comb rate, relative to breed standard? The lighter one also disqualified herself because she didn't autosex like she should have. I thought she was a cockerel for the longest time.