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LOL! I didn't think that I saw any Black Copper roosties in your youngin' pen Mel. I did see this one though and please look at the comb like Don has suggested...... I can't see photos on my computer very clearly....they come across pretty fuzzy and they show no details. This is not just your photos Mel.....it's every photo I see online...my monitor stinks and I am too much of a tight wad to purchase a new one.
Edited to say....nevermind just saw that you looked at the comb. Cull is right.......
Gnarles doesn't have any sprigs but his comb has well....here I'll just post a photo of it and Don you can tell me what it is, I have posted it before but you didn't say if it was bad or not.
Never had sprigs come out of Gnarles or my original Davis birds....but I am getting a few not normal things pop up out of the crossings of the 10 mos old BCM girls that came from Florida last summer....ie, the combs and feathered shanks that are TOO heavily feathered and those that are too heavily feathered have very short outer toes, very very low riding birds, which is not the norm for Davis birds to be so low riding and short legged. I also have a hennyroo that I hatched 3 months ago and seriously couldn't tell you if it is a male or female.....again NOT normal from Davis birds in my experience. The kicker is that over the last 2 years I have got really nice combs out of that pen.
I'm starting to think that I will be better off using my Bill to produce anything worth anything and dealing with all the clean legs....however, I do have Lil' Bill with feathered legs that I am seriously thinking of replacing Gnarles with once I see how he coppers out and I have 3 more nice little Blue Copper roosties in the brooder under a broody BCM, but one of them has incredibly heavily feathered shanks and of course he is the one with the best comb.
I give.....UNCLE.....UNLCE!!!
Here's Gnarles comb......
Sorry it's the best photo I could get to upload..the other side of his comb looks identical to this side.
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/uploads/11170_imgp7867.jpg
Kim, there is really nothing for sure that we can say about the comb, but I have noticed that when the comb blade is serrated like his that the sprig and split is more common. I have done a lot on the comb improvement and will write something on what I have found if anyone is interested.