Agreed, first is a cockerel, simply based upon coloration.
~Alex

~Alex
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Please explain the colour comment? I don't know much about Easter Eggers. The babies are a mix between my black Ameracauna hen or my Lohmann browns and a reddish coloured male.Agreed, first is a cockerel, simply based upon coloration.
~Alex
Please explain the colour comment? I don't know much about Easter Eggers. The babies are a mix between my black Ameracauna hen or my Lohmann browns and a reddish coloured male.
That's really interesting,thanks for explaining.Cockerels/roosters, especially mix breed cockerels/roosters, tend to have brighter, more flashy coloring than their female counterparts. Those bright orange wing bars on the gray is a sure indicator of gender. A female would never have that. It goes back to their roots... A female sitting on the nest has to be camouflaged so that a predator doesn't eat her and/or the young she's brooding. The male's job is to breed and protect, and part of that protection is leading predators away from his young. You have to be flashy for that, and to attract mates.