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Not sure, but bottom roo looks yellow shanked.
Yes he is yellow shanked and also feathered shanks also plan on keeping him
If he's yellow shanked, then your eggs were not from pure cuckoo marans, at least not correct ones.
Yellow shanks are usually a culling point, if it matters whether or not the birds you breed are correct according to the standard.
If you just want dark eggs, then it doesn't matter. Usually yellow legs in cuckoos come from barred rocks crossed in somewhere, and barred rock genes don't usually help with corrrect egg color.
If you breed this rooster, even to hens without yellow shanks, he will pass his yellow leg genes on to half of his offspring. It will be very difficult to eliminate in future generations.
Not sure, but bottom roo looks yellow shanked.
Yes he is yellow shanked and also feathered shanks also plan on keeping him
If he's yellow shanked, then your eggs were not from pure cuckoo marans, at least not correct ones.
Yellow shanks are usually a culling point, if it matters whether or not the birds you breed are correct according to the standard.
If you just want dark eggs, then it doesn't matter. Usually yellow legs in cuckoos come from barred rocks crossed in somewhere, and barred rock genes don't usually help with corrrect egg color.
If you breed this rooster, even to hens without yellow shanks, he will pass his yellow leg genes on to half of his offspring. It will be very difficult to eliminate in future generations.