So are the eggs bluer or is the production just better?
I want to know this also. Kern
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So are the eggs bluer or is the production just better?
So are the eggs bluer or is the production just better?
I want to know this also. Kern
Ack ... guinea!??! Really?? Crap, now I'll have to stay glued to the computer hitting F5 every 3 seconds.I'm happy to be an enabler!! I will put more Sebright eggs on in a couple of days. I just don't like to ship at the end of the week. I will put different eggs on tomorrow. Maybe Guinea, or duck, or d'Uccle, or silkies....or an interesting mix~![]()
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Don't do it! Those Sebrights were a Huge temptation! I Can't, I just can't... My bater is way to full running a staggered hatch already...
The eggs are sky blue.
Does that mean bluer or the same as the regular Legbars? Kern
Speaking from my experience, they are lighter. You are crossing white with blue, hence light blue. But they are better layers of bigger eggs than CCL. So I would say they are "less blue" than Legbars.
I raised some SBEL's last year, Black Ameracauna over commercial WH hens. They are great layers of large, light blue eggs. I believe they are significantly lighter than my Ams and CCL's (which I have a hard time telling apart), but that could be because I was expecting that. The commercial strains of leghorns have genes that significantly whiten the shells, because as white as possible is the goal. These seem to be dominant and also lighten the blue color. I imagine it like a coat of white paint (like brown would be a coat of brown paint), though I doubt that is what is really happening. The hens themselves are mostly white with some black leakage, but they have the cute faces of an Ameracauna.Does that mean bluer or the same as the regular Legbars? Kern
D'uccle please!!!!! Whats colors?