@Faraday40
That little chick from GG is so cute.
She looks sort of pale, so I'm wondering if she carries the lav gene too. ??? Sadly this sweetest chick of all has another terrible nickname. (BFO- stands for Big Fat Orpington. She's in with the tiny seramas & OEG, so she really stands out. LOL) At the time I collected the eggs,
Dinner (an Isabel Orp) was around & "active." GG's been with
Mr Wonderful for over 6 weeks, so her future chicks will likely have lacing.
When those eggs hatched, I sold a bunch of misc. orpington chicks at a good discount since they were not separated by color. It was a test hatch to prep for all the school groups. They're about 4+ weeks old now. I heard back from someone who bought chicks .... WITH PICS!
Both came from potential laced orp chicks. I think the gold is either another GG chick or an incomplete gold laced orp. The gold has been looking female all along. The silver laced orp's gender has always been more ?. Normally by 4 weeks a male's comb is much taller with more color. The woman was ready to give me the SLO as an unwanted male, but I talked her into waiting a bit longer. (If you remember last fall with all my lav orps - so many had little wattles but ended up female. Too many females!) I'd hate for her to give away a perfectly beautiful pullet and at this point it has a good chance of being female. Sometimes I'm just too honest.
To Compare: Here's 'Mr Wonderful' last year at 4 weeks old. He was mostly still chick fluff but had a pink comb already
MALE
Only my females had that much feather growth at 4 weeks old:
FEMALE:
If hers does end up being male, I'll gladly take him back. She's not able to keep roosters and I'm sure I could find a pretty boy like that a home. To top it off, the daddy is either Mr Wonderful (name says it all) or Dinner who grew up to be so big & docile we could not make him live up to his name.