My silly Icelandics were out sleeping in the rain.
I did a very dangerous manuever (wore the DH's shoes in the super-saturated slosh) to rescue them. Then I locked the dumb things in the coop---along with my two stupid frizzles who sleep in the open on the ground.
Daron, I've had a few with some stubs/feathers but nothing like The Sheriff's that she is sending Jake. The youngsters I have with stubs/feathers are all from my previous rooster, Ari. Audun, my main rooster now, doesn't have any sign of anything on his legs and none of his chicks have anything noticable.
It's not a trait that I am breeding for or against. If it happens, it happens.
This is a pic of Kella's legs. You can see she has some stubs/feathering.
This is a pic of a cockerel that had the most feathering of anything I've hatched here.
So Diva, you are getting some Turkeys or Giant Games or Shamoos???
In 45 mins I will be calling the Post office to see if the Fab Feathered 3 are in yet.
Its 15 here this morn, I hope the truck is heated up from Spokane.
I am thinking , right now, that the leg feathering is a recessive, I will have to see how it breeds on, I will be using both of the roos I am thinking, we shall see a lot more in a year. If, its a greatly increased feathering then it is a dominant, or if just partial then an incomplete dominant, if only showing on a few and a lot with the feathered pullet then its an autosomal recessive, right now, I really dont have a clue.
Need to find out the old fashioned way, work for it.
Mary I did hatch out 3 from the eggs that I got from you, and Daron has them now.
Life is good, and better with Icelandic Chickens !