How? Lavender is recessive so it takes 2 copies to express...![]()
The F1 would be splits to Lav.
The same way you get your Lav Am from black splits
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How? Lavender is recessive so it takes 2 copies to express...![]()
The F1 would be splits to Lav.
The same way you get your Lav Am from black splits
The F1 would be splits to Lav.
The same way you get your Lav Am from black splits
Yeah, I know that... was asking how it would explain what he looks like?? If he was a split, wouldn't he have Legbar coloring?
Yeah, I know that... was asking how it would explain what he looks like?? If he was a split, wouldn't he have Legbar coloring?
True... But then I totally dunno, BECAUSE
I just hatched some eggs from a pen with two males (one a lavender and one a goldneck) and two females (buff and a light buff a bit laced)
And what kind of chicks? At least one looks awfully like lavender down.
He looks more like a blue... Or lavender than an Isabelle. Hummmmm
Very pretty though.
That male you have is Isabelle (2 lav genes replacing the brown (or dark brown).
Cross him with female cream legbars to get splits to lav (isabelle). Those offspring look like cream legbar chicks but carry a copy of lav. Crossing those together will throw about 50% cream legbar looking chicks but expressing the lav color replacing the brown.
Exactly the way the lavender in ams replace the black when breeding splits
It is confusing. We crossed blue isbars with isabelle leghorns and most chicks were BLACK.
But f the chickens were phenotypically blue isbar ah! One black gene in them, one dilute gene
Isabelle leghorns would have two lavendars... So no blacks.... Right?
So... You should ... Uh... Have had 50% black?????