tminer
In the Brooder
- Sep 18, 2016
- 44
- 17
- 49
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Blue isn't recessive and can't hide.My EE that looks basically like yours throws mostly blue chicks with my black rooster... but I can tell she is blue based under her wild type partridge.
One of your may be hiding the diluter gene to black.. it's recessive, so just not showing in your parent stock is my best guess. But this whole genetics thing is such a wide field I'm trying to retain what I've learned and so much learning still left to do!![]()
BBS seems so basic and simple to understand... yet, somehow I'm a little confused. Something for me to ponder and get set STRAIGHT in my brain. Because the things I learn get twisted into my understanding only to discover that that wasn't the whole truth to HOW it worked. Or that I have a basic idea but not a TRUE understanding.Blue isn't recessive and can't hide.
One copy makes blue. Two copies make splash.
I'd be surprised too.
That rooster and that hen can not produce a blue chick. Can't happen.
I don't get it. I have no other roosters and the birds had not been let out of the barns yet as it was still cold and we have snow on the groundYes that chart is right.
Looks to me that that rooster and hen clearly have black not blue.
Black × black makes black only. Can't make blue.
Maybe one of those are so dark of blue they look black? IDK
Maybe there was a spontaneous gene mutation? IDK
Was that hen with other rooster? That was blue or splash before moved to that pen?
If so how long before?
IDK