Quote:
Thor was just a baby when that pic was taken, just shy of a year old. The hen in the pic with him, "Lil'Bit" was my smallest hen, my baby and runt, that was later taken by a hawk.
Here he is at approx. a year and a half old, with some of his girls:
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/4810_xmas_004.jpg
And at nearly two years old - I weighed him at about the same time this pic was taken and he was just a few ounces shy of 13 lbs. (Most of my brahma hens weigh in the neighborhood of 7 to 8 lbs. A couple of fat ol' gals at 9 lbs. I found that the brahmas really didn't "blossom" until they were well past two.)
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/4810_endofapril_002.jpg
I need to get some new pics of the brahma flock. They will be 3 in April. Other than the loss of Lil'Bit, I have lost one of my Ideal birds, to a heart attack in the middle of a very hot summer.
I ended up not having the patience for Brahmas and don't know the standard well, but those are some very handsome birds!
I also really appreciate Terry chiming in, and I appreciate what Ideal does. I don't understand the way people are about hatchery vs. breeders sometimes. When you order straight run day old chicks or hatching eggs from a breeder, you're still only going to get a small percentage of show quality, top of the line stock. From hatcheries, it may be a smaller percentage just because the culling isn't as strict...but still, you can order more birds for the same price so I guess your odds even out. (In some breeds, I want call that a blanket statement.)
I love that if I'm having trouble finding something I want, I always have a good hatchery as a back up. And I love that when the breeders give up and move on to the next big thing, I can still turn to you guys for what I'm looking for. That kind of reliability and stability is so valuable in the poultry world, and it's a tremendous service to some of these breeds that I suspect might otherwise have been almost lost.
Thor was just a baby when that pic was taken, just shy of a year old. The hen in the pic with him, "Lil'Bit" was my smallest hen, my baby and runt, that was later taken by a hawk.
Here he is at approx. a year and a half old, with some of his girls:
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/4810_xmas_004.jpg
And at nearly two years old - I weighed him at about the same time this pic was taken and he was just a few ounces shy of 13 lbs. (Most of my brahma hens weigh in the neighborhood of 7 to 8 lbs. A couple of fat ol' gals at 9 lbs. I found that the brahmas really didn't "blossom" until they were well past two.)
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/4810_endofapril_002.jpg
I need to get some new pics of the brahma flock. They will be 3 in April. Other than the loss of Lil'Bit, I have lost one of my Ideal birds, to a heart attack in the middle of a very hot summer.
I ended up not having the patience for Brahmas and don't know the standard well, but those are some very handsome birds!

I also really appreciate Terry chiming in, and I appreciate what Ideal does. I don't understand the way people are about hatchery vs. breeders sometimes. When you order straight run day old chicks or hatching eggs from a breeder, you're still only going to get a small percentage of show quality, top of the line stock. From hatcheries, it may be a smaller percentage just because the culling isn't as strict...but still, you can order more birds for the same price so I guess your odds even out. (In some breeds, I want call that a blanket statement.)
I love that if I'm having trouble finding something I want, I always have a good hatchery as a back up. And I love that when the breeders give up and move on to the next big thing, I can still turn to you guys for what I'm looking for. That kind of reliability and stability is so valuable in the poultry world, and it's a tremendous service to some of these breeds that I suspect might otherwise have been almost lost.