Robinson (I call him Jim) has a much shorter back, yes?![]()
Camp...so you have the new babies daddy!
How cute!
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Robinson (I call him Jim) has a much shorter back, yes?![]()
Robinson (I call him Jim) has a much shorter back, yes?
Camp...so you have the new babies daddy!
How cute!
Yes, I think that pict shows three -- now it is up to 10.
It's a bit hard to tell from pictures, I think maybe a bit shorter -- but pretty close to the same -- Jack is 'beefier' that Jim by a bit. Good eye.Robinson (I call him Jim) has a much shorter back, yes?![]()
Camp...so you have the new babies daddy!
How cute!
Wait until I post some picts of these little hooligans tomorrow.I had no idea! I feel so honored!![]()
Yes with this many -- I think I will do one more big hatch from different fathers to have some more genetics mixed in -- and it will be time then to call an end to spring breeding season and move to the next stage. you are right!Yeah! Now you will have enough birds to move on to next stage.![]()
Here comes one of my "bright" questions:
Can you tell which are boys/girls?
Mr. Tank is a boy?
Good question. This generation isn't autosexing. -- The first gen I did there were 6 chicks that hatched and I got the sexes of them 100% correct. The other ones that have hatched from this cross of a split male and an Isabel female, I guessed right on one chick for female, but the males, I couldn't tell until the comb grew larger. (That applies to the 6 Isabel color I kept -- all the 14 splits have gone to other homes, I think that there were at least two males in the first hatch batch based on combs by the time that they left, and I think one male based on comb size in the second seven, however, both parties said they were fine with male chicks. (some people aren't allowed or don't want males).Here comes one of my "bright" questions:
Can you tell which are boys/girls?
Mr. Tank is a boy?
That's a tricky one -- because the mothers had zero barring (Isabel). The father (your split guy) has 1 barring gene...but two place holders so he has one non-barring gene. Females have one place holder and they get their 1 barring gene from their male parent. Hmmm -- He could pass along his 1 barring gene or his non-barring gene. Same thing to the sons. They have two place holders and plain Isabel mom doesn't pass along any barring. Split papa can either pass along his one barring gene or his non-barring gene...which is why Punnett's square is so good.Piggy-backing this, would boys have only one copy of the barring gene, and the girls have none? So males would feast her barred and females would not?