Granny's gone and done it again

Don't die!! Are those rare? Maybe I should get some, but they'd all be boys. They have a 4 chick minimum too. Trying to prevent lonely chicken syndrome, I guess. I will go buy some for you, but you will have to come get them. :D
Ya'll hear her acting all innocent like, Oh, did you want some polish ? I had NO idea..
 
Im missing posts. Only see them when someone replies to them
I have that happen too, especially when people are posting a lot. It's like the page has to get reorganized or something.

wc black to laced or white birds produces mostly black birds with a little color to them.

buff lace x gold lace = buff lace colors that are impure for dom. white
buff lace x silver lace = depeends cause its a sexlink cross. depending on which way you go you'll get light buff lace or white hens and roosters being most likely white with red or buff shoulders.

gold lace x silver lace = again sexlink cross, either pure gold hens or pure silver hens. roos will be buttery silver lace with red shoulders.

throwing blue into the mix will cause blue lacing in birds with black lacing.

Wishing, Found this for the polish. I have hatched a couple black polish but I got a tolbunt. I wonder from what hen ? Roo is silver laced split to tolbunt.
:confused: Feather color genetics are very involved and I have not studied it. Often it is not just a simple case one gene pair creating one color. Patterns add another level of complexity and are separate genes. For example, how do you know if a black bird carries genes for lacing? It could be laced, but you can't see it. There is a lot of interaction and incomplete dominance. The terms that people use are not the terms I'm used to, so it's doubly confusing.
 
I have that happen too, especially when people are posting a lot. It's like the page has to get reorganized or something.


:confused: Feather color genetics are very involved and I have not studied it. Often it is not just a simple case one gene pair creating one color. Patterns add another level of complexity and are separate genes. For example, how do you know if a black bird carries genes for lacing? It could be laced, but you can't see it. There is a lot of interaction and incomplete dominance. The terms that people use are not the terms I'm used to, so it's doubly confusing.
HU ? Does that mean you get what you get ?
 

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