Hi old friend! Great to hear from you again!Sorry, been away for sometime. Work and health are keeping me away.
Beautiful chicks @Faraday40 . About the splash looking chick, I am not sure where would it get the 2nd blue gene from. Therefore I think its a recessive white (1 gene from Brick and 1 from Jewel (transferred by Oopsie). Lets see!
And agree with you that she must have been split to lavender as well. You have another treasure in Jewel. She will give you all colors depending on the rooster. Black, Blue, Lavender and even Mauve if you ever have a chocolate rooster.
BTW my scalped pullet completely recovered in about 3 weeks (with the help of turmeric and olive oil). The gap in her skin (about 1.5 inch) completely went away, however still had about 1 cm patch that was featherless. However, when she was 11 weeks old, just over a period of 3 days she grew wattles and became a cockerel instead. I was so disappointed. My kids had already named her Amber Rose and now we had to change it to Mike Tyson. Anyways Mr. Tyson was dropped off at Belmont Feed and Seed 10 days ago.
Does the white gene need 2 copies to show up? Is it sex-linked? Last year from your eggs: All 3 of the mauves that turned white were female. This year, I hatched 4 mystery whites from Oopsie. All 4 had a light mauve-looking down, feathered in white, and grew up to be female. As far as Jewel's current mystery light chick, it's very possible that Brick could be the dad. I also got one choc cuckoo from her, so I already know that they mated.
Sorry to hear about Tyson. Your story of that chick's healing is what gave me hope about our Blue Buff Colombian.
After a fox attack:
Poor girl had a flap of skin that opened & sprayed blood when she shook her head. I simply flushed it & sprayed with Veterycin. It took 1.5 days to crust closed. I kept spraying with Veterycin & let her stay inside for 6 days.
Now she's perfectly normal:
(But I'm still undecided if I'm going to keep her. I really have no need for her, but she's bigger than my laced roo & very sweet.)
Excuse the feathers above. No it wasn't a hawk. Both white hens (Princess & Oopsie) are molting and that's their fav shade tree. As they shake after a dust bath, it snows feathers.