Derp! Yes, thank you. I corrected myself once in the post, but the brain has a mind of its own these days.I think you mean weeks not months.

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Derp! Yes, thank you. I corrected myself once in the post, but the brain has a mind of its own these days.I think you mean weeks not months.
Thanks for getting into more detail. I should have clarified this was only juveniles. Not near POL.Pullets can have 3 raised rows but it happens later (as they near POL). And, males can have a single row. Some males have a ridge with well-defined peas and then show the side rows later like a pullet. I've even seen a few with a single ridge that has no points and no side rows. Lots of funky looks emerge with mixing comb types and this is is why it's more subjective than simply counting rows.
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these are my easter eggers. What gender do you think they are? 18 weeks old
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this one I really question, its in the first pic on the left side
Agree 100%My Agnes Moose has three rows these days and her comb now looks just like a 10 to 14-week cockerel's... But, she's 20+ weeks old. She pinked a bit at six weeks and I could see the rows just starting to get definition at around 12 weeks. My cockerel, OTOH, had a pink single row of peas by four weeks and side rows by 8. So, her development was quite slow compared to his. But, you toss a few slow-developing boys in the mix and it gets harder to say by the comb alone.
Thanks, but can I ask what leans you toward girl on Chiquita? Her comb is so red.Both of them are girls!
what are your experiences with feathering rate? My boys are almost always slower to feather out. Often taking 6-8 weeks to be fully feathered. My girls are done at week 5-6 often times.