mamashark2
In the Brooder
- Mar 6, 2018
- 10
- 3
- 16
We have 9 australorps - as babies, there were several that had attitudes, stood taller than the rest, were slower to develop tail feathers, and had a broken feather pattern on the wings when I pulled the wing feathers out - I assumed based on these observations that 5 of them were males. These were also the smaller birds of the bunch.
Now they are all the same size and I can't decide if my initial observations were wrong or not because I'm having trouble identifying which could be the males. None of them have very large combs, some of them have redder faces than others, but all of the combs are flesh colored. None have significant attitudes - no fighting just a bit of chest bumping and moving on. They are 14 weeks now. The Orpingtons are 12 weeks.
Are there any males in these pictures?
Now they are all the same size and I can't decide if my initial observations were wrong or not because I'm having trouble identifying which could be the males. None of them have very large combs, some of them have redder faces than others, but all of the combs are flesh colored. None have significant attitudes - no fighting just a bit of chest bumping and moving on. They are 14 weeks now. The Orpingtons are 12 weeks.
Are there any males in these pictures?








