Faverolles Thread

Can anyone tell me if LF Salmon Faverolles tend to go broody? What breeds beside Silkies do go broody?
I would say overall LF faverolles don't go broody often. True Ameraucana and Auracanas as well as cochins go broody. As a rule breeder stock as opposed to hatchery stock goes broody more often I think. But it varies a lot from line to line.
 
Can anyone tell me if LF Salmon Faverolles tend to go broody? What breeds beside Silkies do go broody?

My favorites for broody are cochin bantams, they are so tame it makes the chicks tame too. I raise the calicos which also happen to sell great. Good SQ silkies are handicapped by face fluff, so the best broodys are the rattier looking barn quality beardless ones IMHO... however even those can get chicks tangled in their weird feathers
 
I need your educated help. About 6 weeks ago I hatched out what was supposed to be Salmon Faverolles eggs. I got four chicks and anxiously waited to see what sex they would be, believing that coloring would be the answer. Often I am able to tell by the emergence of tail feathers, with pullets developing them before cockerels. To my dismay, the "darker" chicks developed tail feathers first, and the lighter ones, later. However, using the salmon coloring, it appeared that I had one pullet (small tail feathers) and two dark cockerels (with longer feathers). But then there was this chick:



In the bottom right corner you see a cockerel, eating pasture with long tail feather against the water. To the left, you see this brownish faverolles, with short tail feathers and lacking the black coloring of the cockerel. This is Chick X.

Here is what the clearly salmon pullet looks like:



Easy to tell this is a Salmon Faverolles pullet. To her immediate right, another cockerel.

So, can anyone tell me if Chick X is a pullet or a cockerel? Is this an off Salmon? Or another color that got into my eggs?
Thank you in advance!
-Brice
 
I am not willing to chime in without another pic of the face please. I do think this looks like an 'off' cockerel from what I can see. I would be interested in seeing a frontal pic for sure or a nice horizontal pic.

So... I am coming to the Congress. I feel a bit like a school girl going to a concert. I spoke for a little while with a judge out of Maine and am amazed at who is going to be at this show. Will I be able to find any of you Saturday?
 
I need your educated help. About 6 weeks ago I hatched out what was supposed to be Salmon Faverolles eggs. I got four chicks and anxiously waited to see what sex they would be, believing that coloring would be the answer. Often I am able to tell by the emergence of tail feathers, with pullets developing them before cockerels. To my dismay, the "darker" chicks developed tail feathers first, and the lighter ones, later. However, using the salmon coloring, it appeared that I had one pullet (small tail feathers) and two dark cockerels (with longer feathers). But then there was this chick:



In the bottom right corner you see a cockerel, eating pasture with long tail feather against the water. To the left, you see this brownish faverolles, with short tail feathers and lacking the black coloring of the cockerel. This is Chick X.

Here is what the clearly salmon pullet looks like:



Easy to tell this is a Salmon Faverolles pullet. To her immediate right, another cockerel.

So, can anyone tell me if Chick X is a pullet or a cockerel? Is this an off Salmon? Or another color that got into my eggs?
Thank you in advance!
-Brice

what kind of toes/beard/leg feathering does chick X have? To e it looks to be either a cross (silver laced Cochin or Deleware maybe?) to fav or (less likely but way more exciting to consider) a color sport
 
All,
It's identical to the pullett in every way except coloring. Muff, beard, five toes, smaller comb, shorter tail feathers. I have been raising chickens for some time and am fairly educated, so I'm reasonably certain its a faverolles. Could it be mahogany?
 

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