How many chicks will you hatch in 2026?

Both haha. I tend to keep more birds if they don't sell but a lot of times it's panic rushing to set them up in a bigger area. For some reason sales cut off realy sharply May/June (at least in my area). Last few years I was feeling optimistic from the spring rush and hatched a ton only to have a hundred or so left over - I'm determined not to repeat my mistakes :)
@Debbie292d did a fall hatch last year to have grown out pullets available this spring, although I think most of them sold much earlier than planned, but, its a great idea!
 
@Debbie292d did a fall hatch last year to have grown out pullets available this spring, although I think most of them sold much earlier than planned, but, its a great idea!
I do have, I believe, 14 left of 40 or so. It is a great idea, but they don't last like I thought they would. I sort of thought more 4H'ers would be knocking at my door, but these have gone little by little from just silkie lovers. Five more or so are going Tuesday.

I'll probably do it again this fall.
 
Spring time, and as such, chick time is slowly approaching. Rather, it isn’t really, but I much prefer thinking it is, rather than that whole winter-y mess going on outside :sick.

If I am to incubate this year, I need to source eggs before summer temperatures hit. An easter hatch sort of sounds nice, although it may not be possible.

Then I have to think of breeds. The goal is the same. Healthier gene pool, natural brooding, Mediterranean/primitive build and predominantly single combs.
Going with the landraces has been a good baseline. A wild mix of genetics, but with a build that is greatly suited for our weather. The Brahma and Aseel additions to the mix brought broodiness in.

So now I have the following breeds in mind. Araucana, Fayoumi, Dongxiang Lukedanji, more aseel and possibly more landraces. The problem is that the sources are quite limited here. If I get eggs from all these breeds this year, then I’ll be looking to outcross much sooner than if I were to introduce the breeds gradually.

I’m leaning towards araucana as the first addition. Problem is, they also have a pea comb. Right now the birds are quite split, but even a few homozygous pea comb additions would make it the dominant comb type here. But that is the only negative I can see, so it might be worth it.
The Dongxiang might be a better first addition, but I have not been able to find any solid info on them, so it’s much more of a gamble (plus sourcing them might not be as easy).
Recommendations here would be most welcome.

In either case, I reckon around 20 eggs is where we’ll be. As mentioned in my first post here, I really want to count on the broodies this year. They’ll sit on eggs of their own (which would be fifth generation I believe). I’m hoping to try the experienced hen (if she’s kind enough and decides to sit) on 15-17 eggs. Inexperienced adults will get 12. There is only one pullet this year. IF she decides to sit (highly unlikely, since I’m pretty sure she’s 100% Tsouloufati, but she was broody raised so who knows), she’ll get 6-10 eggs, depending on how she deals with them, and the season.

There is no way I’ll be able to guess how many we’ll end up this year (and I am prone to throwing a batch in the incubator if I see that the year hasn’t gone as planned, which is almost always the case), but that should give a rough estimate now that we’re getting closer to hatching season;). So, say 20 eggs, and 27 from the broodies at most (very likely that one or none sit), that should be 47 chicks in total. Make it 50 just because it sounds better, and that’s my number for the next three seasons.

I hope I’ve not gone terribly off topic here:oops:
 
Spring time, and as such, chick time is slowly approaching. Rather, it isn’t really, but I much prefer thinking it is, rather than that whole winter-y mess going on outside :sick.

If I am to incubate this year, I need to source eggs before summer temperatures hit. An easter hatch sort of sounds nice, although it may not be possible.

Then I have to think of breeds. The goal is the same. Healthier gene pool, natural brooding, Mediterranean/primitive build and predominantly single combs.
Going with the landraces has been a good baseline. A wild mix of genetics, but with a build that is greatly suited for our weather. The Brahma and Aseel additions to the mix brought broodiness in.

So now I have the following breeds in mind. Araucana, Fayoumi, Dongxiang Lukedanji, more aseel and possibly more landraces. The problem is that the sources are quite limited here. If I get eggs from all these breeds this year, then I’ll be looking to outcross much sooner than if I were to introduce the breeds gradually.

I’m leaning towards araucana as the first addition. Problem is, they also have a pea comb. Right now the birds are quite split, but even a few homozygous pea comb additions would make it the dominant comb type here. But that is the only negative I can see, so it might be worth it.
The Dongxiang might be a better first addition, but I have not been able to find any solid info on them, so it’s much more of a gamble (plus sourcing them might not be as easy).
Recommendations here would be most welcome.

In either case, I reckon around 20 eggs is where we’ll be. As mentioned in my first post here, I really want to count on the broodies this year. They’ll sit on eggs of their own (which would be fifth generation I believe). I’m hoping to try the experienced hen (if she’s kind enough and decides to sit) on 15-17 eggs. Inexperienced adults will get 12. There is only one pullet this year. IF she decides to sit (highly unlikely, since I’m pretty sure she’s 100% Tsouloufati, but she was broody raised so who knows), she’ll get 6-10 eggs, depending on how she deals with them, and the season.

There is no way I’ll be able to guess how many we’ll end up this year (and I am prone to throwing a batch in the incubator if I see that the year hasn’t gone as planned, which is almost always the case), but that should give a rough estimate now that we’re getting closer to hatching season;). So, say 20 eggs, and 27 from the broodies at most (very likely that one or none sit), that should be 47 chicks in total. Make it 50 just because it sounds better, and that’s my number for the next three seasons.

I hope I’ve not gone terribly off topic here:oops:
You sound so organized! I had to read that twice! Sounds neat though! :)
 
You sound so organized!

Now that is something I’ve never heard before :lol: ! Thank you!
I like to think that I’m somewhere in between, but I don’t think that’s how others would describe me.

I had to read that twice!

Oh gosh, I made it super confusing, didn’t I:oops:? No structure to that whole block of text. Sorry!
Sounds neat though! :)

I’m hoping it will be. As mentioned my plans have this magical quality of never going as I’d have hoped:p
 
Spring time, and as such, chick time is slowly approaching. Rather, it isn’t really, but I much prefer thinking it is, rather than that whole winter-y mess going on outside :sick.

If I am to incubate this year, I need to source eggs before summer temperatures hit. An easter hatch sort of sounds nice, although it may not be possible.

Then I have to think of breeds. The goal is the same. Healthier gene pool, natural brooding, Mediterranean/primitive build and predominantly single combs.
Going with the landraces has been a good baseline. A wild mix of genetics, but with a build that is greatly suited for our weather. The Brahma and Aseel additions to the mix brought broodiness in.

So now I have the following breeds in mind. Araucana, Fayoumi, Dongxiang Lukedanji, more aseel and possibly more landraces. The problem is that the sources are quite limited here. If I get eggs from all these breeds this year, then I’ll be looking to outcross much sooner than if I were to introduce the breeds gradually.

I’m leaning towards araucana as the first addition. Problem is, they also have a pea comb. Right now the birds are quite split, but even a few homozygous pea comb additions would make it the dominant comb type here. But that is the only negative I can see, so it might be worth it.
The Dongxiang might be a better first addition, but I have not been able to find any solid info on them, so it’s much more of a gamble (plus sourcing them might not be as easy).
Recommendations here would be most welcome.

In either case, I reckon around 20 eggs is where we’ll be. As mentioned in my first post here, I really want to count on the broodies this year. They’ll sit on eggs of their own (which would be fifth generation I believe). I’m hoping to try the experienced hen (if she’s kind enough and decides to sit) on 15-17 eggs. Inexperienced adults will get 12. There is only one pullet this year. IF she decides to sit (highly unlikely, since I’m pretty sure she’s 100% Tsouloufati, but she was broody raised so who knows), she’ll get 6-10 eggs, depending on how she deals with them, and the season.

There is no way I’ll be able to guess how many we’ll end up this year (and I am prone to throwing a batch in the incubator if I see that the year hasn’t gone as planned, which is almost always the case), but that should give a rough estimate now that we’re getting closer to hatching season;). So, say 20 eggs, and 27 from the broodies at most (very likely that one or none sit), that should be 47 chicks in total. Make it 50 just because it sounds better, and that’s my number for the next three seasons.

I hope I’ve not gone terribly off topic here:oops:
If you lived closer / didn't have challenging import laws, I would be happy to assist you with your egg sourcing woes :woot

I have 2 Brahma mixes, 1 hatched last year so I haven't seen her go broody yet, but my older one, goodness!!!!! BROODY, worse than a silkie and huge, she could probably sit on 25 eggs and be fine, joking kinda... The Brahma mixes would have the advantage of already having 1 sc gene for you and bred back to a sc landrace rooster, that would give you 50% sc chicks that are 3/4 landrace and 1/4 Brahma.
 
That sounds great! Just about what I need.
What’s the landrace?
Also, I admit, I’m not sure what the sc gene is either :oops: .
Are the Brahma mixes home bred? I’d love to see a photo of them!
It sounds sort of like what we have here, though very different genes. One aseel x Brahma, her two 50% landrace offspring, and two or three of their offspring.
All the broody genes come from that original girl, so the first outcross really needs to be something broody.

I’ve been looking into more and more breeds that are available here, but things haven’t been promising. Pretty much everything aside from the Araucana is rather hit or miss. Ayam Cemani, Yokohama, even the Fayoumi are either very broody according to some, or the least broody breed out there.
I suppose I COULD go for more pure Brahmas, but they struggle so much here, it really wouldn’t be a pleasant life. Plus, they’re going to need a whole lot of outcrossing to have a lighter build again


If you lived closer / didn't have challenging import laws, I would be happy to assist you with your egg sourcing woes :woot

I have 2 Brahma mixes, 1 hatched last year so I haven't seen her go broody yet, but my older one, goodness!!!!! BROODY, worse than a silkie and huge, she could probably sit on 25 eggs and be fine, joking kinda... The Brahma mixes would have the advantage of already having 1 sc gene for you and bred back to a sc landrace rooster, that would give you 50% sc chicks that are 3/4 landrace and 1/4 Brahma.
 

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