Can you tell if it's just feathers, or a fatty cushion? Feather trimming might help, but
I'd probably opt for tail trimming. Best wishes!
ITs just feathers
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Can you tell if it's just feathers, or a fatty cushion? Feather trimming might help, but
I'd probably opt for tail trimming. Best wishes!
Why not if youʻre only cutting feathers and itʻs not too young?
Well my shipping days from Greenfire Farms are over thanks to the post office. I tried this spring to unsuccessfully purchase some spitzhauben chicks on RareBreeds, 3 boxes of chicks total all dead at arrival or within a week. Took another chance last month on a Rees line auction again on RareBreeds, two boxes of nearly dead chicks later I have two pairs and that's all I'm going to get. GFF won't ship to my area anymore because of the dratted post service. I don't blame them! And they did make it right by refunding the auctions both times. Crossing my fingers I can get these babies to maturity!
Well my shipping days from Greenfire Farms are over thanks to the post office. I tried this spring to unsuccessfully purchase some spitzhauben chicks on RareBreeds, 3 boxes of chicks total all dead at arrival or within a week. Took another chance last month on a Rees line auction again on RareBreeds, two boxes of nearly dead chicks later I have two pairs and that's all I'm going to get. GFF won't ship to my area anymore because of the dratted post service. I don't blame them! And they did make it right by refunding the auctions both times. Crossing my fingers I can get these babies to maturity!
I hatched a batch of chick in May and notice about them.
a) The male/female ratio 4:1
b) Most of the male comb flopped over one side like a leghorn's. Since this breed has brown leghorn, so that would be normal.
Does anyone notice the same thing? Is the floppy comb line lay more eggs than straight comb?
The Standard for the Brown Leghorn cockerel and ALL APA single combed breeds is for an erect comb.
The standard for the Brown Leghorn pullet allows for a come that falls to one side. The Cream Legbar Standard is the similar to the APA Brown Leghorn Standard in that the cockerels should have erect combs and that the hens are allowed to have the comb flop to one side.
The differences between the APA Brown Leghorn and the Cream Legbar is that the APA Brown Leghorn is a 5 pointed comb while the UK standard for the Legbar is 5-7 points (currently 6 points in the proposed APA standard). Also the Leghorn has a comb with comes off the back of the neck horizontal to the ground and the Legbar has a comb that slopes down following the line of the neck, but not touching it.
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Ohh...and there is not correlation between comb floppiness and egg production. The flop is a combination of the size of height of the comb and the thickness of the comb as inherited from its mother and father.
If you have flopped combed cockerels I would suggest trying to breeding him to only hens that have short combs that don't lay to a side. In crested breeds the size of the crest also effect the comb so you also could try pairing flop combed cockerel to hens with modest crest sized to keep the crest from getting the mad scientist heir do look and to help keep the combs in line.
If you are only noticing flopped combs on your pullets, then your line is as it should be (not many are though since get the combs right is very difficult on single combed crested birds with larger combs that follow the line of the neck).
The crests tend to push the comb forward or more likely to one side of the other.I also notice the one with bigger crest tend to have more floppy comb.