Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
there are about 10 different hens I can think of think of since I let the whole flock of 30 run together. Next year I will be more selective... I only have 2 coops... Have to build more!!! Or rather I want more breeding/brooding pens.They are dark/darker -- do you know if the eggs came from a hen with the dark feather tips on breast feathers? They are pretty little things too...
Tough call. You do want a crest, and you do want good disposition. Big size is a good trait....
speaking of dark chickens...the female on the left looks quite melanized, and the female on the right also melanized but crestless? What are your objectives? just blue egg layers, or are you going to breed them. ??
Crest is interesting... in is an incomplete dominant gene. that means that the hen who doesn't have a crest most likely has no cresting gene. A CL with only one cresting gene -- will show a very small crest -- and after some experience you can probably recognize the look -- and it will take two cresting genes to give the normal look. Most dominant/recessive genes are all or nothing -- so 1 of a dominant looks like 2, and 1 of a recessive looks the same as if that gene weren't present at all.I do want to breed them. From the front the lighter hen looks like she might have a crest develope, but from the side it doesn't look like she does. Her offspring could still have crests though if she carries the gene right? Is the dark color an issue or just a matter of personal preference?
Sounds like he has two traits that you need for your breeding -- crest and good disposition......The smaller rooster apparently has the bigger crest, you just can't tell from the pic. So would I want him then?
Do a progeny test breeding to find if they are single or double for a dominant gene . Bred to a bird with no crest a double gene would produce all crested chicks . If single copy then you will get 50% of each .I sure wish that there was a test!!! Haven't been able to find anything. The closest I ever got was one that was used for sexing parrots........
ETA - because a non-crest gene (lower case cr) could be passed to a CL male -- it could give you a stellar comb - with a tiny crest and one could think that it was an excellent choice for breeding....and that would continue to pass a non-cresting gene forward. Then two non-cresting would pop up in the future some time and the crestlessness would continue. JMO.
Of course that presupposes that you have one without a crest. ;O)Do a progeny test breeding to find if they are single or double for a dominant gene . Bred to a bird with no crest a double gene would produce all crested chicks . If single copy then you will get 50% of each .