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- #521
Here are some headshots -


nbb1


nbb2


nbb3

here he is again (above)- with the camera lens doing a slight distort on his beak and wattles -- what a comb from that angle...



nbb4



b5 -- now this is a cute chick -- and the middle photo shows that his back feather growth is slow. Seems that the males grow their feathers more slowly.... These are probably the 5 that CJWaldon identified a few posts back up there in this thread.... good eye -- when she said she saw 5 boys. I don't know if this one will be barred or not. These photos are about a week old.
The nbb2 etc is just for non-barred boy -- and so b5 is just going to be boy 5 for the moment.


Boys being boys -- someone has to be the look-out on top of the water dispenser doesn't he?
Then, these developing a little slower:



I'm thinking boy -- I'm thinking barred.....



Pretty sure this is a boy and barred...and one indicator too, is the slower feathering. Remember that that feather problem with the lavs the 'permanent pin feathers' affects only the males, right? -- These guys don't have THAT -- but some of their feathering takes longer then the other kids in the brooder.
Now, this little one is going through the scruffy phase for sure:




Definitely going to be barred, when he grows his feathers in -- and strongly barred, I think if he is showing this much barring this early. -- but..... did you catch that little crest he has? (I think it's he)
now this one:



This one is very large, very curious and somewhat assertive -- dunno....
close up of hackles -- barred? gender....hmmmm


girl

her hackles close-up barred...a little salmon on the front.
so bg1 (barred girl 1)


nbg1


non barred and crested, I think this one is going to be particularly pretty when she is grown. One thing about crests, the express more strongly on the female -- so going by the smaller comb and the crest -- I have high confidence that this is a girl.

Here's a close up of her neck hackles -- an indications of her coloration.




She definitely got her dad's barring gene, and she got his lav too. Earlier in the thread it was mentioned that barring expresses differently in different breeds of chicken. This chick is 'Maori Tattoo', and she may be heterozygous (non-matching genes) on her E-locus -- so I am really interested in how she will develop. What ever is the non-wildtype (e+) may be why her barring is so prominent.



It was hard to tell if she was barred or non-barred -- those back feathers look barred- but the neck hackles looked unbarrred. She went as one of a breeding trio to someone wo lives near here. The reason I think non-barred is because that one lav. chick also showed the appearance of barring on the back, then she grew up solid Isabel.
These are the chicks hatched 3/21, which makes them 5-weeks plus. For the most part gender is evident...except that one, and barring -- probably -- but some are TBD.
nbb1
nbb2
nbb3
here he is again (above)- with the camera lens doing a slight distort on his beak and wattles -- what a comb from that angle...
nbb4
b5 -- now this is a cute chick -- and the middle photo shows that his back feather growth is slow. Seems that the males grow their feathers more slowly.... These are probably the 5 that CJWaldon identified a few posts back up there in this thread.... good eye -- when she said she saw 5 boys. I don't know if this one will be barred or not. These photos are about a week old.
The nbb2 etc is just for non-barred boy -- and so b5 is just going to be boy 5 for the moment.
Boys being boys -- someone has to be the look-out on top of the water dispenser doesn't he?
Then, these developing a little slower:
I'm thinking boy -- I'm thinking barred.....
Pretty sure this is a boy and barred...and one indicator too, is the slower feathering. Remember that that feather problem with the lavs the 'permanent pin feathers' affects only the males, right? -- These guys don't have THAT -- but some of their feathering takes longer then the other kids in the brooder.
Now, this little one is going through the scruffy phase for sure:
Definitely going to be barred, when he grows his feathers in -- and strongly barred, I think if he is showing this much barring this early. -- but..... did you catch that little crest he has? (I think it's he)
now this one:
This one is very large, very curious and somewhat assertive -- dunno....

girl
her hackles close-up barred...a little salmon on the front.
so bg1 (barred girl 1)
nbg1
non barred and crested, I think this one is going to be particularly pretty when she is grown. One thing about crests, the express more strongly on the female -- so going by the smaller comb and the crest -- I have high confidence that this is a girl.
Here's a close up of her neck hackles -- an indications of her coloration.
She definitely got her dad's barring gene, and she got his lav too. Earlier in the thread it was mentioned that barring expresses differently in different breeds of chicken. This chick is 'Maori Tattoo', and she may be heterozygous (non-matching genes) on her E-locus -- so I am really interested in how she will develop. What ever is the non-wildtype (e+) may be why her barring is so prominent.
It was hard to tell if she was barred or non-barred -- those back feathers look barred- but the neck hackles looked unbarrred. She went as one of a breeding trio to someone wo lives near here. The reason I think non-barred is because that one lav. chick also showed the appearance of barring on the back, then she grew up solid Isabel.
These are the chicks hatched 3/21, which makes them 5-weeks plus. For the most part gender is evident...except that one, and barring -- probably -- but some are TBD.
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