That is an interesting question. Since white is not sex-link, you would not expect to see sex-link coloring in the offspring.thank you for all the suggestions about the UP, don't think we can go after labor day cause of school age grandkids.
Any time in the summer is nice by Lake Superior, but spring/early summer the blackflies and skeeters are just about intolerable.
1muttsfan, I have to 4month old chantecelrs....hatched from whit hen and partridge roo, they are showing brown feathers in the wings but have not started crowing, nor turning red in the comb. chanties have such small combs & wattles it is hard to tell if roo or hen. the breeders whites that got brown in the wing were roos, but I am wondering if that is always the outcome, with the father being brown could they be hens?![]()
According to the Chicken Calculator:
A partridge roo not carrying white (i/i,C+/C+) over a dominant white (I/I) hen should produce all gold duckwing offspring.
The same roo over a recessive white hen (c/c) would produce all gold duckwings
If she carries both, you would get all white pattern gold duckwings (red pyle, looks like leaky white)
If he carries recessive white (C+/c and she is both dominant (I/I) and recessive (c/c) white, then you would get a variety of all white to white pattern gold duckwings
If she was dominant white only then she would look more like a red pyle, as would all their offspring.
If she is recessive white only, then you would get a mix of all-white and gold duckwing offspring.
So in none of these crosses to you see all white offspring, and the ones that have color come in both sexes. So I would guess that your leaky birds are white-pattern gold duckwing, and could be male or female. Clear as mud.
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