@ChicKat can you post the link to buy The Genetics of Chicken Colours - the basics by Sigrid Van Dort - David Hancox & Friends please?
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I posted it above...lol.How did I find this?? It jumped on to my screen magically
This is the original PDF of the e-Locus chick diagrams.
https://www.genetics.org/content/genetics/40/4/519.full.pdf
@ChicKat can you post the link to buy The Genetics of Chicken Colours - the basics by Sigrid Van Dort - David Hancox & Friends please?
Thank you -- somehow I missed your post. Great minds think alike etc.I posted it above...lol.
Post #65
Or we can always ask the Moonshiner because he files all this stuff in his head. For my part I always have to look it up---even if I once knew it.
He is a gorgeous fellow. I would certainly find room for a boy like that. Off color subject, I really really would like to have columbian Leghorns someday as well....that may be another thread.This picture is from "Scratch Cradle" website. She also has a lot of good genetic information --including shank color and egg color: You can go to her website using this:
https://scratchcradle.wordpress.com/2012/04/01/hatching-this-week-brown-leghorns/
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This guy is a beauty. The Mahogany saddle feathers and wing triangle and the bright neck-hackles show a lot of autosomal red. His color intensity would make him a good out-cross for anyone who wanted to reinforce color in an Isabel line IMO. It would then put you 1 generation away from your target chicks -- becacuse paired with an Isabella all his chicks would be split for lav.
Look at his very regular comb, reasonable sized wattles, bright white earlobes and very yellow legs.
Were I to find a beauty like this, with his chicks paired with a LPID-B2 female, I'd be 1 generation away from my desired birds for the females -- because all my females will pass barring gene to their young. So some chicks from his pairing --then those females bred back to LPID-B2 male would be what I want....but any males could be 2 or three generations away -- because those males would have to be paired back to barred females --- to have some of them get double barring. It would be a matter of statistics... When that fork in the road comes -- I will go to Henk's chicken calculator and get percentages.
Also, rather than raise brown leghorns -- I'd rather obtain one from a brown leghorn breeder who would specialize in them. Since I've abandoned blue eggs, I think that the chicks would mostly have tinted eggs......
Nothing beats counting your chickens before the birds are even on the ground right?
ETA I think according to sigrid's chart he is s+/s+ and Ar+/Ar+ for color -- and based on his clear wing bar and triangle e+/e+ for a true duckwing. So IMO that makes him a pure 'wild type'...like gallus gallus the jungle fowl in coloration.
I think someone on the Moonshiner’s thread has Columbian Leghorns in the US.He is a gorgeous fellow. I would certainly find room for a boy like that. Off color subject, I really really would like to have columbian Leghorns someday as well....that may be another thread.
Me too. I have a couple of lavender Orpingtons here (in GA). They are huge, young, docile, curious, eggless wonders, even with dietary oyster shells added (- no problem considering them molting and the erratic season change,next Spring will be fine for them to start). I love my flock of cuties.AHA!!! That answers the question that popped into my mind. The neck-hackles and wing triangle of that male have a more intense saturation than most...and that 'sunset' color really appeals to me.
So I'm hearing a couple of things: --
Thanks guys -- I've learned stuff already and this thread is not even 24-hours old.
- How to intensify the lavender,
- Mahogany is probably the source of a more vivid straw