Ok, here goes my attempt at posting her pics.
The second pic is one of her eggs.![]()
I was reading a Russian article about 5-toed chickens and that the anomaly can occur sometimes in a 4-toed breed. Silkies have the anomaly of having 4 toes sometimes or sometimes 6 toes or sometimes 4 toes on one foot and 6 toes on the other foot and some Silkies can be missing the feathering down their feet. Your beautiful Wheaten-colored girl looks like a Faverolles or French Meusienne (both have 5 toes but with foot-feathering) or you have a Meusienne missing her feathered toes, or you have a Cochin that sprouted the 5th toe anomaly. She is too full bodied to have EE in her since EEs stand tall and statuesque and are very lithe in their movements (but she does have the Ameraucana/EE look to her comb). Some EEs can have their muffs/beards missing. As for EE eggs they can be pink, cream, tinted, light brown, stone, blue, blue-green, sage, mint, and sometimes white whereas the APA Ameraucana should lay only bluish eggs. Although APA Ameraucanas and EEs usually have slate legs, my pure Blue Wheaten Ameraucana was born with very light legs and no hint of slate while her sister had nice slate legs with pretty blue hints in her feathering and one sister had a larger beard/muff - same hatch, same lineage, same parents, but the sisters looked totally different from each other. Anomalies are the very reason breeders cull their stock, or in some instances use an anomaly to create a new breed variation.She has no feathering on her legs or feet, that was one of the first things I looked for. She does have a look similar to some of the salmon faverolles I have seen. I'm just suprised to find a cross breed in this flock, he prided himself on the purest strains available, they were his babys. Most of the others were 6 months-1 year old, she looks a bit older. A few cochins look about the same age, but there were no faverolles. Not sure what her deal is.![]()