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We do these evaluations on all our stock. We have not gotten to a point of being able to cull only on combs, wattles etc., but we keep these in mind when making breeding pens. We hope to match the best pairs to compliment each other and work out some of the negatives we're dealing with. So far we have had outstanding success with this in the short term. I have six week old pullets brooding that have better pelvic spread than many of the hens we started with before culling.
And we have weighed all our breeding males this year. Next year we will weigh the females as well. We have matched heavier males with some of the smaller females, which falls right into width and length of keel, etc.
We do not use a 1-10 system, instead we write down notes for each bird, combine that with their ID#, a few photos of each bird to help us ID them and to see what their conformation is (along with our notes on their conformation), their measurements, weight on the males, age and bloodline, etc. All of these notes really are informative and help us cull with confidence. If a hen is laying well but has other faults we don't want to breed on, we will move her to the egg laying pen or sell her as an egg layer. However, if she's not laying well, she becomes chicken soup. We check the hens again in about three months before doing them in to make sure they weren't going through a slow period. If a hen goes through these lulls but picks up, we will give her away with a pet and full disclosure that she is not an A+ layer.
Will keep everyone updated in the many years to come as we continue to improve our flock! We are very excited about some of the progress we've made in this first generation, and look forward to the road ahead!