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The APA standard for Silkies calls for a small dark walnut comb and small dark wattles, however "hatchery grade" Silkies often fall short of this standard and have (as you said) red combs and larger red wattles. The hatcheries still sell them as Silkies, although they were be instantly disqualified from a poultry show for these flaws.Thanks, folks, for the warm welcome.
Now, I have a question about Silkies.
The Silkies we had when I was a kid had red combs and wattles. Their plumage was pure white and full, as Silkie plumage is. I have since seen images of what are supposed to be true Silkies with feathery topknots on their heads instead of combs, no wattles to speak of, and blackish skin. Yet, the hatchery where we got ours from said ours were Silkies. So, could ours have been hybrids of some sort with the red combs and wattles? I've always been confused about why some Silkies have feathers covering their heads and no wattles, while others have red combs and wattles, yet they're still called Silkies.
Can anyone clear that up for me?
I have seen so many photos of silkies with HUMONGUS combs it makes me want to. I don't know why the originators of the breed wanted to ruin an otherwise beautiful bird with a huge TUMOR on the head. I do love silkies, as long as their crests cover the combs.
Only recently I have realized, from reading chicken magazines, that the term "banty" refers to size, not to any particular breed. "Banty" is just the small version of many larger breeds, but can be any breed, if I'm understanding it correctly.