( 3 pullets and 1 Roo that already has nice copper hackles) in my main coop and that up-and-coming Olive Egger Roo decided that he would "welcome"
the newcomers to the coop. He must have been pretty proud of himself because now, for the first time in his life, he is crowing (or at least trying to).
The other day, you said my roo might have a "thumbprint" in his comb.
I checked out his comb and looked at my 3 juvenile guys, but I'm still not sure what you're talking about...
I do have one juvenile with a wave to the front of his comb, so he's out, right?
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This time of year I just do not have an example of the fault here to show you. If I remember the Thumbprint was on the right side of the comb. What it is a deep impression of pushed in meat causing the comb to have pushed in effect. The bird with the wave as you say has a twisted comb and is a fault. The only problem with breeding these faults is they will replicate themselves. Much easier to just not use them.
Well, we survived the tornadoes! One of my EEs is sick from stress but the rest of the chikkies are doing great. A tornado touched down around a mile from my house. It jumped us thank God and we have NO damage! We had no power / water for 36 hours though.
These pics are a mile from my house. The first used to be an old barn and a pair of silos, the second is a woodlot across the street from the former barn. Those silos are smeared over a mile.