- May 19, 2009
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Hi BeeKissed ,
Did this this bird have coarse or fine textured skin?
Thanks,
Karen
Did this this bird have coarse or fine textured skin?
Thanks,
Karen
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Hi OleSandhiller I am sure you are going to enjoy them. I do enjoy mine and they came from Jeremy as chicks. ScottGreetings. I lost my entire flock of RIR to a dog attack( saint barnards). I was in need of some good breeding stock to rebuild my flock. I called Jeremy Woeppel (XW Poultry Ranch) at Chambers Nebraska. He said he had some young New Hampshires he could spare. I live 35 miles to the north, so I made a date and purchased 12 pullets and 2 roos. That was yesterday and they are already growing on me,I like them. I can see myself putting a lot of time and energy into this breed. Here are a few pics. Thanks XW.![]()
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This is a very young pullet,who was quite relaxed, and did not have her tail up.When her main tail is complete , the topline will change.She has good , wide feathers for a juvie. Those feathers will smooth down after a bath too.Dragonlady, what is the fix for a cushion like this? I ask for the other poster as well as myself.
Can it be fixed by a particular complementary mating or is it polygenic?
Thanks,
Karen
Hi BeeKissed ,
Did this this bird have coarse or fine textured skin?
Thanks,
Karen
Thanks Vickie...guess we'll see how animated she becomes at Tucson.I've had slouchy birds at home, that turned into electric chickens at a show.You'll know when you show her ! I really like this girl.
She really puts me in mind of a BA I had a while back...big cushion, underslung tail, deep chest but not quite the right...shape, for lack of a better word. When I culled her I found the most huge fat deposits I have ever seen on a chicken in my whole life..the biggest being right under that cushion.
Below is the cutaway of that fat pad, showing how very thick it actually was....approx. 1/2 in. thick.
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Australorps are prone to fatty liver disease. It has to do with their high egg laying ability. I found out about this due to a couple of mine dieing and going in for Necropsy. The condition makes them add fat--it does not indicate over feeding.Oh, you ain't seen nothin' yet...look at the rest of her fat!!!!
I don't overfeed my flocks and these birds forage actively all day long, so plenty of exercise...so, I'm thinking this has something to do with genetics and the resulting increased storage of fat in this body type? I've never really had a chicken with this body type before this one and I'd never seen this level of fat storage in these areas, so genetics vs. feed/exercise? Could this be the cause of "cushion" on some breeds that is needing to be removed from the genetics in order to remove that cushion? I had never realized that genetics played such a role in the way chickens store fat, but I should have guessed by the differences in how humans do the same.
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