Thank you Keith for the feedback.
Glad to hear that you think his tail is correct. It's higher than what my other cockerels was, maybe his was a bit low. Hopefully it will stay short and full but he's still got more growing to do.
His coloring l am pleased with the color of the copper on his body, he just needs more of it, and like I said, there's still time.
His ear tufts are hard to decide on color wise. My other cockerel had black ear tufts. Upon close inspection it appears he has some copper tuft feathers lining the outer edge of his tufts with the middle a dark gray. I'm pleased with that as I understand copper tufts means he's got a lot of copper color genetics. I'm glad he's not over colored as my hen has great copper herself and I would hate the pairing to make a bunch of over colored birds. He's also got 2 copper feathers on his breast near his hackle, I think that's a good sign as well?
I will definitely check Lady Olivia when I get home. I took a brief look at their vents a couple of days ago looking for signs of pests and found none, but they could use a more thorough looking over. I suspect it's not lice eggs on her head, though if it is, that's a problem that could be solved. If it does happen to be white tipped feathers, what does that mean? Would she be DQd at show? Is it inheritable? I plan on breeding her as 1) she's the only one I got 2)everything else about her is spectacular. If you look in the pic with her pecking the ground, it appears her carriage feathers are brown! I noticed that yesterday with the naked eye as well. Is that a concern?
Curious, were you able to view the video yesterday? Looking at my post it appears the video link is broken, is it viewable on your end?
Thanks again!
I agree that he has some more growing to do so his coloring should continue to fill in some. Also remember that the chooks do not express their true color until after the second molt at about 18-22 months. The Marans Rooster's best asset is his coloring (feathers & legs) even over type, combs and tail sets (these traits are inherited from the hen). It would be great to have all these traits in one Rooster but that does not always happen so we have to match strengths with faults in our breeding pairs to produce progeny that will be correct. What we want are rich copper hackles & saddle feathers, well defined red shoulder, copper ear tufts and a small amount of copper coloring on his breast. The Marans Rooster that is well colored produces well colored chicks - he will add the copper hackles to his female progeny. A Marans Rooster with dark colored ear tufts and solid black breast will generally produce all black females. These black females are useful if they have overall good type, eye color, correct tail set and combs as they can be breed to a Rooster with an over copper colored breast. Some copper color on the ear tufts is better than none - at least he got some of the copper genetics.
I wasn't sure about the white-tipped feathers on Lady Olivia (hard for my old eyes to see it in pics) so I just offered up an alternative based on my experience. If she has white tip feathers then she is a carrier of recessive white or parasitic white gene. I do know that the white can be hard to bred out of a line but it is possible and will take several generations. Chooks Man is our resident expert on the white gene so he can better explain it - I am not 100% sure but I think the parisitic white is harder to bred out than the recessive white. The white and brown feathers are not desirable in the BCM - definitely faults and possibly DQs.
I was able to view the video last night. Hopefully Chooks Man will respond to your post.
Take Care,
Keith
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