Is this Wyandotte a roo or a pullet? Can you tell?

Mr Pilo

Chirping
7 Years
Aug 25, 2013
42
19
94
Duncan Ok
I live in town so I can’t have a roo
 

Attachments

  • 96EBDA58-5ED7-4985-9DB3-EEC21D652FC7.jpeg
    96EBDA58-5ED7-4985-9DB3-EEC21D652FC7.jpeg
    661 KB · Views: 20
  • AD6D61E7-AACB-4908-81EE-4F27D339D9D1.jpeg
    AD6D61E7-AACB-4908-81EE-4F27D339D9D1.jpeg
    522.1 KB · Views: 11
  • A1E3A064-14E2-4114-8D53-122728B07305.jpeg
    A1E3A064-14E2-4114-8D53-122728B07305.jpeg
    449.7 KB · Views: 11
  • A892D4A9-B9E5-49FF-AD49-89F2BB15A0D4.jpeg
    A892D4A9-B9E5-49FF-AD49-89F2BB15A0D4.jpeg
    675.5 KB · Views: 10
Feather sexing only works with specific cross breeds (slow feathering crossed with fast feathering breeds). You are just going to have to wait a few more weeks to be sure. With single combed breeds you can usually tell by 5-6 weeks of age. Wyandottes with their rose combs take longer to determine. You may not know for sure until closer to 12-14 weeks of age, if then.😊
 
Wyandottes are extra hard to tell sex. I've looked at multiple threads about it...females can get pink combs/wattles early, males can develop late. It's a hot mess.

One sign that is somewhat helpful (but not 100%) is if they get a big white patch on their wings near their shoulders they are often male. But sometimes it can just mean they are a pullet with a weird pattern.

I have one I'm playing a waiting game about one myself, and made a thread about it...going to post regular photos until I know for sure. Figured it might help or interest others in the future? In the meantime I'm trying not to get tooooo attached since we can't keep ours if (s)he crows.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom