I only know because i have lavenders lol and bluesWow this has all been so informative! May I ask how all of you learned so much?
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I only know because i have lavenders lol and bluesWow this has all been so informative! May I ask how all of you learned so much?
Wow this has all been so informative! May I ask how all of you learned so much?
The daughter of her I still have is a black frizzle, (dad was BCM)
I am hoping the BCM frizzle still has blue in her genes, I am going to breed a blue bird to my BCM/friz.
Wow this has all been so informative! May I ask how all of you learned so much?
If I’m looking to add a blue rooster to my silkie breeding flock (I’m new to this) and I have black, and splash hens how do I ensure I get a blue rooster and not something split to lavender. I messaged a breeder and she said “Most of our flock is shades of blue. From lavender to dark blue almost black.Lavender is the self blue gene. Our rooster is self blue split "true" blue.”Yes, neither is sexlinked, so it does not matter which color is male or female. Lavender is recessive, so it will not show up on the first generation cross to a non-lavender bird that is not carrying the gene, either. So the Lavender bird works essentially like a Black bird on those BBS charts, except all offspring will carry a lavender gene.
How carrying a gene works is, because the gene is recessive, two copies are needed for it to express, one from the mother and one from the father. Since only one is received from the lavender parent, and not from the non-lavender parent, it does not express. But the bird still carries that gene from their lavender parent and thus has a 50-50 shot of passing it on to its own offspring.
It's worth noting that it's not advised to cross Blue and Lavender as it's very difficult to tell which birds have only Blue of those genes expressing, and which have both Blue and Lavender expressing. From what I understand, you just end up with birds that look like a paler Blue with bad lacing when both genes are expressing.
I think my two blue Australorps are actually one blue, and one lavender. Both are pretty, but I'm glad I'm not breeding them for blue birds. The lavender, or lavender looking (?) one has poor quality feathers.It's worth noting that it's not advised to cross Blue and Lavender as it's very difficult to tell which birds have only Blue of those genes expressing, and which have both Blue and Lavender expressing. From what I understand, you just end up with birds that look like a paler Blue with bad lacing when both genes are expressing.
If I’m looking to add a blue rooster to my silkie breeding flock (I’m new to this) and I have black, and splash hens how do I ensure I get a blue rooster and not something split to lavender. I messaged a breeder and she said “Most of our flock is shades of blue. From lavender to dark blue almost black.Lavender is the self blue gene. Our rooster is self blue split "true" blue.”
So could I get a rooster from her and confidently breed to get, blue, black, and splash chicks from the parings ?
I think my two blue Australorps are actually one blue, and one lavender. Both are pretty, but I'm glad I'm not breeding them for blue birds. The lavender, or lavender looking (?) one has poor quality feathers.
Mine was from a small, local(ish) breeder, not one of "the big ones." Disappointing, but I'm not breeding these birds anyway.@3KillerBs had something similar happen with one of her Australorps if I remember correctly. Makes me wonder if one of the hatcheries has lavender genes hiding out in their Blue Australorp stock.
If I’m looking to add a blue rooster to my silkie breeding flock (I’m new to this) and I have black, and splash hens how do I ensure I get a blue rooster and not something split to lavender. I messaged a breeder and she said “Most of our flock is shades of blue. From lavender to dark blue almost black.Lavender is the self blue gene. Our rooster is self blue split "true" blue.”
So could I get a rooster from her and confidently breed to get, blue, black, and splash chicks from the parings ?
@3KillerBs had something similar happen with one of her Australorps if I remember correctly. Makes me wonder if one of the hatcheries has lavender genes hiding out in their Blue Australorp stock.![]()
No, I had a case of mistaken identity from a "Brown Egg Assortment". I'd thought that the chick was a pale-colored Blue Australorp but realized when she was older that she was a Lavender Orpington.![]()
Ahhh, okay, my mistake!