You have a lovely looking flock Minky. I picked my breeds based on egg color because I too love a colorful egg basket. Many are still too young to lay but I’m looking forward to having almost every color egg. Right now no one is paying rent, bunch of free loaders.
I wanted to share my experience. I set some eggs from my flock because I wanted to hatch a few more pullets. My rooster is an Ameraucana and I also have his son, an AM/Wyandotte cross. Many of my older girls are classified as dual purpose. So what I hatched are smaller then what would be expected of a DP breed because of the smaller size of the AM. (Because they have the blue egg gene and many of the typical characteristics I call my hatched birds EEs.) I didn’t have much luck and ended up with a lot of cockerels.
I also decided to do my very first run of CX. I have a yardbird plucker and do the whole process by myself. With the set-up and clean-up I think it’s better to do more at once. I can’t see it being worth all the effort to do just one or two birds at a time every couple of weeks. I just did the last 6 of my hatched EE cockerels yesterday and it took me a few hours. I’m still new at this though so I hope to get faster in the future.
Here’s a picture from when I did CX and EE at the same time. In the picture the CX was 8 weeks old and the EE was 14 weeks. You can see the difference in the bodies of the two. I think you have to keep this in mind if you want to raise DP birds, especially if your family loves breast meat.
I don’t know if I missed this in the thread, but something else to keep in mind is that broody hens stop laying while they are sitting on eggs and raising chicks. It takes 21 days to hatch an egg and they may care for their chicks for many weeks after that. It could be several months before she starts laying again. And broodies aren’t always successful. I’ve had one so far. She was very devoted but ultimately unsuccessful. I ended up buying day old chicks for her; which she was a very good mother to. It was worth it because a mama with her chicks is super cute.

I wanted to share my experience. I set some eggs from my flock because I wanted to hatch a few more pullets. My rooster is an Ameraucana and I also have his son, an AM/Wyandotte cross. Many of my older girls are classified as dual purpose. So what I hatched are smaller then what would be expected of a DP breed because of the smaller size of the AM. (Because they have the blue egg gene and many of the typical characteristics I call my hatched birds EEs.) I didn’t have much luck and ended up with a lot of cockerels.
I also decided to do my very first run of CX. I have a yardbird plucker and do the whole process by myself. With the set-up and clean-up I think it’s better to do more at once. I can’t see it being worth all the effort to do just one or two birds at a time every couple of weeks. I just did the last 6 of my hatched EE cockerels yesterday and it took me a few hours. I’m still new at this though so I hope to get faster in the future.
Here’s a picture from when I did CX and EE at the same time. In the picture the CX was 8 weeks old and the EE was 14 weeks. You can see the difference in the bodies of the two. I think you have to keep this in mind if you want to raise DP birds, especially if your family loves breast meat.
I don’t know if I missed this in the thread, but something else to keep in mind is that broody hens stop laying while they are sitting on eggs and raising chicks. It takes 21 days to hatch an egg and they may care for their chicks for many weeks after that. It could be several months before she starts laying again. And broodies aren’t always successful. I’ve had one so far. She was very devoted but ultimately unsuccessful. I ended up buying day old chicks for her; which she was a very good mother to. It was worth it because a mama with her chicks is super cute.