So am kinda "upsizing" rather than downsizing lol. Working on adding marans back to my flocks again, and dark cornish hopefully. Have my chicks for next years chicken breeders picked out. Really pleased with the colors and variety I am seeing hatch with my EE/OE flock.
So guys, what breeds or species will you continue to keep, or not keep? What birds have been a headache, or a joy to have?
For us, turkey, guinea, ducks, quail, geese and chickens will still be here next year.
Well, mine are pets, so I'm not sure if I should bother saying this, but everyone who's here is staying here.
EDIT: And it just occurred to me what you probably actually meant...

So, to keep it short,
the birds that I won't be getting any more of are the
Guinea fowl (they're just too loud and wild, not fun to deal with),
red sexlinks (too many laying issues that too often lead to shortened lifespans),
Leghorns (once again, wild and crazy and not my thing, with the exception of my Exchequer who is a sweetie), and
production Rhode Island Reds (too aggressive to the other birds, and the roosters are about the meanest things I've ever met).
Birds that I will always have if I can help it are
Dorkings (They are the best pet chickens. Seriously.),
Plymouth Rocks (great pets, dedicated layers, and so pretty when you get the heritage / breeder quality ones),
Cochins (sweet, calm birds and good-tempered roosters),
Bielefelders (big, calm, loveable, and easily handled),
Easter-eggers (because they make beautiful eggs and add color to the flock, of course!),
Marans (for their dark eggs mainly, but I love their personalities as well), and
Call Ducks (because they're so darned cute!).
As for next year, I've kind of lost my battle with myself over not getting more chicks for a while...

So I'm looking at getting just a couple more Dorking pullets next spring, and maybe a couple other breeds, too. And I'm just going to have to try hatching more call ducklings as well.

Crash is just so precious and I want more already!
Speaking of Crash, oh my goodness, this picture of him this morning! I have no words!

He's trying to be so serious!
He's getting so big, can't believe he's only 5 weeks old!
I was confused after the sexlinked talk the other day so I did some digging. The way I understand it for barring to be sexlinked the FEMALE has to be barred and the male solid. If the male is barred ALL his chicks will be barred (I think). I love genetics but my brain doesn't absorb information like it did before I had three kids screaming at me all the time
You are correct, but only if the rooster is carrying two copies of the barring gene. If he is carrying one copy, half of his offspring will inherit barring, but it won't be sexlinked. It's sexlinked when the female is barred because of how their chromosomes are paired. This image was helpful for me to visualize that:
It's the same in chickens as it is in ducks. Male birds have ZZ chromosomes, while females have Zw chromosomes. That's why in pure breeds, barred hens are darker than barred roosters; the female can only carry one copy of the barring gene, which exists along the Z chromosome. As you can see, the mother gives her Z chromosome to her sons only. Because barring is not on the w chromosome, which is given to her daughters, if she's paired with a non-barred male, then her daughters have no way of receiving the barring gene, while her sons always will. And that's how sexlinks are made.

Meanwhile, if the male has just one copy of the barring gene, he passes it to half of his offspring. Because it's the female that determines the sex of the chick, the male should pass on barring evenly between male and female chicks, and so he will
not make sexlinks when crossed to non-barred females.
And sorry for rambling on about it.

I love genetics, too...