Smokey' s comb is pinker and bigger than some eggers older than her,and she is like a karate ninja when she gets outside with the other chicks.and she is all black and white splotchy peppering. Is she a he??? I will be very sad 

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Smokey' s comb is pinker and bigger than some eggers older than her,and she is like a karate ninja when she gets outside with the other chicks.and she is all black and white splotchy peppering. Is she a he??? I will be very sad![]()
I know it's way too soon for me to post but we just got our first 4 chicks ever, about a week ago. One was sold as an Americana and were told it would have the pale greenish eggs so I'm assuming it's an EE. We got 4 different breeds though so I have nothing to compare her to. She is like twice the size of all the other chicks and waiting the 4+ weeks to find out what she really is is KILLING me. Do EEs sometimes run larger than RIR, Black Sex Links or Welsummers? Those are the other 3 we have to compare her to. She seems to be at the same stage of feathering out as the others except the Black Star who is behind the others in size and has 0 tail feathers. I'm hoping the EEs large size isn't a sign she's a boy.
I am very new to chickens, These are my first that I have owned. I have 13 EE that are 5 weeks old. So I should be able to guess at who is a roo and who is a pullet ? Here is a picture of them.Actually, a VERY easy way to show people sexing EE's by demonstrating with your pictured birds there is by color. EE's are very easily sexed by color, as most are actually sex-linked too.
Females in most cases come out a partridge looking brown and black, often known as wild-type duckwing. Some though are silver too, which is strictly black and white, sometimes with a salmon breast.
Males on the other hand are quite often black and white, but have colored red, orange, or yellow feathers that emerge on sometimes the neck, back, and most importantly and almost always the shoulders. These are tell-tail signs of a male, as females cannot have that color in those regions. Other male colors that are red flags are one coming out with a black breast and red markings on the shoulders, neck, and back.![]()
True saddle and hackle feathers actually come in much later, so judging by them is a hard thing to do, especially when someone is new with chickens.