Lavender patterned Isabel duckwing barred - lavender brown cuckoo barred - project and genetic dis

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I had light splash/lavender orps from an auction that I called Opal and Iris. They looked like big clouds floating through the yard. You definitely need an Iris. :)
:thumbsup Good idea, and speaking of Iris, a friend dug this up last year -- from the woods and this year it bloomed and now I think I need about a dozen wild Louisiana Iris -- and one nice tame Iris that is a barred Isabel!
Ours in the pond bloomed recently!
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Yes !  she was with a Cream Legbar male -- so all she could do was split -- however -- all the babies from that pairing would be barred!  


The isabels all have nice feathering. Some of the splits are nothing but fuzz. :lol:

I'm hoping to reunite YB (yolk butt) with the rest soon. He preened and has a fluffy bottom now, which helps hide any bits.
 
The isabels all have nice feathering. Some of the splits are nothing but fuzz.
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I'm hoping to reunite YB (yolk butt) with the rest soon. He preened and has a fluffy bottom now, which helps hide any bits.
Interesting -- about the feathering. The three I pictured above had pretty raggedy looking feathers a couple of days ago - and I wondered if it was that lavender dilution can make the feathers degraded stuff going on -- Now today they looked pretty good. If you check under the chins of the male and the one female, they look scruffy -- but I don't know if that is because of the way they were drinking and eating out of the cage cups -- or some feather growing in. --

Your observation makes me wonder if something about that legbar's feathering gene is more slow-growing.
 
The isabels all have nice feathering. Some of the splits are nothing but fuzz. :lol:


I'm hoping to reunite YB (yolk butt) with the rest soon. He preened and has a fluffy bottom now, which helps hide any bits.

Interesting -- about the feathering.  The three I pictured above had pretty raggedy looking feathers a couple of days ago - and I wondered if it was that lavender dilution can make the feathers degraded stuff going on -- Now today they looked pretty good.  If you check under the chins of the male and the one female, they look scruffy -- but I don't know if that is because of the way they were drinking and eating out of the cage cups -- or some feather growing in.  -- 

Your observation makes me wonder if something about that legbar's feathering gene is more slow-growing.  


I should mark them. It's my general experience that slow-feathering chicks are roos, and early feathering are pullets. It's not fool proof, but I was right on 6/7 of my bantam cochins.
 
I should mark them. It's my general experience that slow-feathering chicks are roos, and early feathering are pullets. It's not fool proof, but I was right on 6/7 of my bantam cochins.
That would be a good thing to track. I remember when my first female Cream Legbar had bigger tail ffeathers than the male -- and I thought things were upside down..... Later, of course, his grew in --
 
A few F1 project chicks.
I know the F1s arent nearly as exciting as your F2s but theyre on their way.

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From left to right.
Silver rooster over isabel hen F1 chick
Straight isabel chick
Cuckoo rooster over isabel hen F1 chick
This is a chick thats going to be used in my barred isabel project.
Ive also got a pen with an isabel rooster over cuckoo hen but I havent hatch any of her chicks yet.

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Same silver over isabel F1 chick
Same cuckoo over isabel F1 chick

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Same straight isabel chick
Cuckoo rooster over silver hen F1 chick
 
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