Temperaments can vary greatly, but seem to be somewhat genetic. I had one Cock that I had to eliminate from my program, including all of his progeny. The rest have been fine. I find young CL flighty but with adulthood they settle down, unless scared of course. They are great foragers and hide quite well from predators during the day. I have had Legbars with Silkies and Bantam Wyandottes without any problems.
Eggs can be blue to green, and a few olive colors have shown up the last year. Hope that helps, and welcome to Cream Legbars!
@KPenley - Thank you for the feedback. I appreciate hearing from someone with a bit of experience behind their input rather than a new owner who thinks their breed is the cat's meow before having the breed for a while. I've had a few breeds that were great as juveniles and then turned into terrors after the first-year molt. I've also had fluctuating personalities/temperaments in individual hens depending on molting times or brooding. I can always re-home a hen if she doesn't work out in the flock but doing research homework with feedback has saved me from making inappropriate breed choices the last couple years.
Our blue egg Amer is a fantastic temperament around our gentle breeds and is so wary that she avoids conflict with any flockmate. I was just wondering how much a CL hen would take advantage of lording over the extremely gentle breeds in our tiny flock. We have a very small cottage yard so there's not much room for hiding or avoiding an aggressive pullet - we had to re-home our Buff Leghorn at one-yr-old because she found she could easily bully, chase, and vigorously pull out the beards, muffs, and crests of the Amer and Silkies without retaliation from them. I will tolerate normal pecking order politics but not anything that injurious.
The first time I bypassed CLs was because they have a Leghorn history. Our experience with Legs around gentle non-combative breeds was not good so I hesitated considering CLs last time around. If there is a strong possibility that the CL's Leghorn history can cause the same behavior as their Leg ancestor I would appreciate a lot of feedback from you CL owners/breeders. If you've never owned Legs you may not be aware of how they can be very assertive to downright cannibalistic in their associations with other breeds or even with each other. Chickens can be brutal just because they're chickens but my folks raised Legs and I've had a couple in my backyard flock and their reputation does precede them. A Leg can be mellow for a year or two and suddenly go bonkers on her flockmates. I was wondering if any CL breeders or owners have seen this behavior come out in any of their CL hens?
Many thanks for your feedback and hospitality!
