- May 21, 2017
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His blue gene isn’t strong. He’s just blue. Blue crossed with blue/black/splash will give you about 50% blue chicks. Out of random chance, you got more than 50%.My ER Rooster apparently has some strong blue genes. 25 chicks out of 14 hens came out mostly blue. I think 1 BR boy was black, 2 BCM chicks were black, and 3 chicks are white, but the rest are grey (blue?) Even the BR mixes and the BCM mixes. Those hens are obviously black and dad is mostly black, so i was shocked to get so many blue babies. I don't see any indication of blue coloring in dad. Ill post a photo of him, but he was soaking wet from rain so it may be hard to see his colors right. The blue genes obviously didn't come from the hens. Look at me talking like i know what the "blue" gene even means or where it comes from or anythinglong story short, bunch of blue EE chicks and no "blue" EE parents. Well, a couple hens, but they dont explain the whole batch. Also, what would you call their markings/coloring? Its unique. Or atleast to me. I've never seen chickens colored like this. My hens aren't colored this way to contribute either. Anyways, here's dad and chicks. The first 4 single chick photos are some of the BR and BCM babies to show how even the jet black hens made blue babies with him. The rest are some of the EExEE crosses.
One blue gene would make him blue, two blue genes would make him splash. He’s blue, so he has one blue gene.That looks about like the way crochet patterns look to me.So he don't have to be blue colored himself, just have a blue gene? How is he not blue if he "is" blue? I'm still so lost, lol.
None of your chicks look splash. You can’t have a chicken that is both blue and splash, though you can have a splash with a lot of spots. So all the chicks with a lot of blue aren’t splash.And im lost on the splash too. Is that what their weird markings are considered? And why are they marked this way if the roo and hens aren't? This is gonna take awhile...
They actually appear to be silver, which your rooster is as well. See the white feathers on your rooster? That’s the silver. Some of your hens appear to have silver as well. Silver usually replaces the majority of the red/gold/brown tones on a chicken.