chicken calculator seems to indicate that BR over Delaware (Silver Barred Columbian) would still give solid,black, barred offspring.
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We could probably ask speckledhen what barred Rock and Delaware give, I'm sure she's done that...
I can’t explain what is going on. I always thought Columbia was what caused that Delaware pattern and that is a dominant gene. Even when it is split it should dominate but your photos show otherwise. Maybe there is another recessive gene in play?
All I know is that the more I learn about chicken genetics the less I understand. That’s why it is good to make these crosses. You can predict all you want but surprises are all over the place.
Thanks for responding Cynthia. It is appreciated.
If the male is barred, the chicks will be barred. He passes his barring gene to all progeny, IF he is properly double barred as a normal BR rooster would be. If he's single barred like my Rex in my previous post, he has only one barring gene and it will not always pass on so some birds will come out plain old black.Wow, thanks for all the suggestions guys. I do have a buff and I'm going to try to incubate some of her eggs and some eggs of my Americana. Hoping for the best.Does anyone know what a cross between a barred and a black astralop would look like?![]()
Referring to ridgerunners question:
I have
2 barred roosters
Buff orpingtons
Black astralop
Gołden comet
Coco maroon
Gołden laced wandott
Americana
Leghorns
Black speckled sexed
RIR