ArizonaDesertChicks wrote:
Easter Eggers from the hatcheries are not mutts - all chickens, even Ameraucanas, have used more than 1 type of chicken in their background/heritage to get the final product. The hatchery Easter Eggers are not being bred to other types of chickens and are not mutts. They are bred for certain features, the same as all other hatchery chickens, and are pretty consistent.
I do agree that many hatcheries that are breeding Easter Eggers are pretty consistently breeding Easter Eggers for certain features such as, beards, muffs, the blue egg gene and perhaps even the pea comb.
But, I placed an order for Easter Eggers from a very well known hatchery (not gonna name them) but just to say a well known hatchery and they sent me chicks that when grown were nothing but MUTT MIXES!!! They were labeled as the Easter Egger chickens layers of blue, green, pink eggs.
I have both Easter Eggers and Ameraucana and comparably the birds that I received after grown were nothing but mixed chickens. Some with clean faces, large single combs like leghorns, several with muffs. They looked to be Easter Eggers mixed with leghorns, golden laced wyndotte, silver laced wyndotte, and a couple with slight feathering on their legs. Most layed brown eggs, a few layed white, and couple layed green.
I would like to say yes, there are hatcheries that are breeding Easter Eggers with other breeds of chickens with absolutely no thought behind breeding for consistency! It is happening and will continue to happen from now on.
I do agree that many hatcheries that are breeding Easter Eggers are pretty consistently breeding Easter Eggers for certain features such as, beards, muffs, the blue egg gene and perhaps even the pea comb.
But, I placed an order for Easter Eggers from a very well known hatchery (not gonna name them) but just to say a well known hatchery and they sent me chicks that when grown were nothing but MUTT MIXES!!! They were labeled as the Easter Egger chickens layers of blue, green, pink eggs.
I have both Easter Eggers and Ameraucana and comparably the birds that I received after grown were nothing but mixed chickens. Some with clean faces, large single combs like leghorns, several with muffs. They looked to be Easter Eggers mixed with leghorns, golden laced wyndotte, silver laced wyndotte, and a couple with slight feathering on their legs. Most layed brown eggs, a few layed white, and couple layed green.
I would like to say yes, there are hatcheries that are breeding Easter Eggers with other breeds of chickens with absolutely no thought behind breeding for consistency! It is happening and will continue to happen from now on.