The first hatch is all black with feathered feet. Next month the first roo’s will be bred back to Chocolste hens.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Finally made it to chocolate. These are my F1b babies. The pictures do not give these babies justice. They are a beautiful chocolate color, a little darker than the Orpingtons . To get this color: I bred a black Cochin rooster with a chocolate Orpington hen, then bred the roo offspring back to a chocolate Orpington hen. I hatched out 7. Three are chocolate Roos, two have feathered legs and feet. The rest are black hens without the feathered feet.How did that hatch turn out? Would love to see pictures. I am fixing to start a similar project and another color/pattern with my Cochin Bantams too
Finally made it to chocolate. These are my F1b babies. The pictures do not give these babies justice. They are a beautiful chocolate color, a little darker than the Orpingtons . To get this color: I bred a black Cochin rooster with a chocolate Orpington hen, then bred the roo offspring back to a chocolate Orpington hen. I hatched out 7. Three are chocolate Roos, two have feathered legs and feet. The rest are black hens without the feathered feet.
Thanks. Yes, LF chocolate Cochin is what I’m working towards. I wish I would have started out with a chocolate Orpington roo but I couldn’t find one at the time.Hey that's awesome! You're working towards Large Fowl Chocolate Cochins or? I forgot whether or not you mentioned what breed exactly.
View attachment 3955822View attachment 3955824View attachment 3955825
I've added these guys to my breeding program. Chocolate Orpingtons, these guys are huge! One of my hens is likely between 8-9 pounds.
That would be awesome. I haven't seen very many LF Cochins in that color. I have a single bantam chocolate cochin girl who started laying recently, she's in my bbs pen under a blue roo. I plan on keeping a chocolate split roo once I hatch from them. I'll be trying to get a mauve birds.Thanks. Yes, LF chocolate Cochin is what I’m working towards. I wish I would have started out with a chocolate Orpington roo but I couldn’t find one at the time.
I picked up a choc Orpington rooster today in hopes of pairing him with my standard black Cochin hens. I understand their offspring would be sex linked- and give chocolate females but what should I do after that? Breed back to a black cochin to keep the “Cochin” look? Or breed to the split offspring cockerels from the first set of offspring? In hopes for both a chocolate roo & chocolate hen? So much to consider!Thanks. Yes, LF chocolate Cochin is what I’m working towards. I wish I would have started out with a chocolate Orpington roo but I couldn’t find one at the time.
Is the orpington boy English or American?I picked up a choc Orpington rooster today in hopes of pairing him with my standard black Cochin hens. I understand their offspring would be sex linked- and give chocolate females but what should I do after that? Breed back to a black cochin to keep the “Cochin” look? Or breed to the split offspring cockerels from the first set of offspring? In hopes for both a chocolate roo & chocolate hen? So much to consider!
Yours are beautiful!!! Thank you so much for the information, I’m going to put this in my notes! I’m up for the challenge! I believe my choc rooster is English but not 100% positive.Is the orpington boy English or American?
English orpingtons already have a similar structure to cochins, just lack feathering.
If you were to breed splits back to the hen you'd maintain the cochin look, but the chocolate would take longer to achieve.
Of the first offspring I would keep the ones who inherited the most feathering.
If you're good with the full sibling thing, you could breed them and take the best chocolate sons from those pairing and then cross back to the hens and just go from there.
-
My chocolate orpingtons boy for fun:
He's english, or so I was told.
His parents look to be english, I'm guessing he's still feeling out at 8 months.
View attachment 3965399
View attachment 3965400
His hens:
These girls are American:
View attachment 3965402View attachment 3965403