Does this work?

IceStorm

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Saw this image, does this actually work? Has anyone found this true?

IMG_3959.webp
 
You can breed a flock of birds in a certain way that the males feather out one way, and the females feather out another way (one is fast, one is slow, I forget which). But in order to get there, you have to first remove from your breeding population all the males and females with the wrong type of feathering gene. So you would need 1-2 generations or more of chicks that are culled to produce fast/slow feathering of the correct gender. And then going forwards you could use this method. But most commercial flocks are not bred this way, all the genes are mixed up together. Unless the flock owner specifically breeds for males and females to have separate feathering speeds, this method will not be accurate on the resulting chicks.

In short, the answer you are looking for is "Usually not."
 
for me an accurate way to tell is within the first 2 days, the pullets always have more or bigger or longer feathers, the males may have none or very small ones
 
If you have hatchery chicks that were bred for wing sexing, then yes. It's like color sexlinking, though, where they have two breeding pens creating the parent stock and another pen where they put their fast feathering males with their slow feathering females to make wing sexable offspring. The offspring will be fast feathering females and slower feathering males which means the trick cannot be repeated using these offspring. I believe Amberlinks are wing sexed but I don't know of any others.
 

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