KaijuChickens
In the Brooder
- Feb 5, 2018
- 4
- 14
- 21
This spring I am planning to get my first chicks. I am planning for 4 total, but can have up to 6 (hens only, no roosters allowed). In doing research for best breeds and characteristics that I prefer, I have narrowed down the list to a handful of ones I might want (Easter Eggers, Plymouth Barred Rocks, RI-Reds, Ameraucana, Australorp, Brahmas, and Orpington are all on the potential list).
Also during that research, I found conflicting notes about mixing breeds and why it is good or bad to do that. Some sources say mixing breeds is good because if a disease strikes it may only impact one and not the others. (Plus you get a nice variety to watch and interact with)
On the flip side, other sources said one breed may carry diseases that impacts other breeds and not to mix the flock. Other sources also indicate that some breeds dominate others (although all research so far indicates all the breeds I have on my list would mix well if I do mix them).
I am not sure if there is a right or wrong answer, but would like your thoughts... would it be better to get 4 different breeds or 4 of the same? (If I get 4 of the same, I would lean towards EEggers due to the variety of appearance and potential egg color differences).
As always, thanks for your advice!
Also during that research, I found conflicting notes about mixing breeds and why it is good or bad to do that. Some sources say mixing breeds is good because if a disease strikes it may only impact one and not the others. (Plus you get a nice variety to watch and interact with)
On the flip side, other sources said one breed may carry diseases that impacts other breeds and not to mix the flock. Other sources also indicate that some breeds dominate others (although all research so far indicates all the breeds I have on my list would mix well if I do mix them).
I am not sure if there is a right or wrong answer, but would like your thoughts... would it be better to get 4 different breeds or 4 of the same? (If I get 4 of the same, I would lean towards EEggers due to the variety of appearance and potential egg color differences).
As always, thanks for your advice!