- Oct 4, 2015
- 27
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Not this bird, but it’s ancestors..?Highly doubtful that someone spliced any genes in this bird
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Not this bird, but it’s ancestors..?Highly doubtful that someone spliced any genes in this bird
No. Still highly doubt it. It's not worth the cost to the hatcheryNot this bird, but it’s ancestors..?
It’s an epidemic here with broodiesI've got an EE, Orpington mix, & Project Wheaten Crele Orpington hen broody, I believe it's the first time for all 3.(I meant 3 broodies, in my post)
Hens that hoard eggs annoys me abit. But I can't imagine a whole coop being broody.
Agreed… I’m sure the hatchery has nothing to do with a chick’s mutation. Just like farmers don’t genetically modify their tomato, corn, wheat or soy crops… it could be a mutated gene from many generations ago, passed on as a dormant gene that expressed itself with this chick. I’m not sure what your point is. Did I miss something..? A question was asked and I have an educated reply. Unless we do a genetic profile, DNA mapping, loads of bloodwork, MRI and a necropsy, All we have are educated theories… I offered mine, what’s yours..? I’m sure that if you have a theory, it will be received with consideration and respect…No. Still highly doubt it. It's not worth the cost to the hatchery
Yes it is, got 4, plus two broody right now.It’s an epidemic here with broodies![]()
One of my hens went through a spell of laying very thin shelled eggs over night - 2 of them at a time. Took me a while to figure out who it was.That's 2 today
Surprisingly enough it's not my silkies doing the broody thing! It's the barnyard mutts! I think it important to take a break from laying.Yes it is, got 4, plus two broody right now.
I've got 2 silkies, a Silkie/D'uccle cross, & a CrackerFowl hen broody in one coop, a Easter Egger, & a project Orpington in the other coop that are broody.Surprisingly enough it's not my silkies doing the broody thing! It's the barnyard mutts! I think it important to take a break from laying.
Do you think someone was modifying chicken genes in a lab?What ever genes were spliced to turn on the “egg-timer” will have turned on/off other genes too, which could lead to all sorts of deformities or diseases…
Wow!I've got 2 silkies, a Silkie/D'uccle cross, & a CrackerFowl hen broody in one coop, a Easter Egger, & a project Orpington in the other coop that are broody.