my barred rock layed a blue egg!!!!

Those eggs look olive to me too, but could be shadows. Next time you have breakfast, crack and peel one of the eggs in question. Then peel off the inner white membrane attached to the inner shell. If the inner shell color is an Exact blue match to the outer shell color, the eggs are indeed blue. If there is any color variation between inner and outer shell color, the egg is green. I have many Easter Eggers (including cuckoo eggers but no barred eggers), and sometimes i cant tell the shell color of the easter egger eggs until i compare inner and outer shells.

Odd your pullet came from tractor supply though, because barred rocks should be pure. Possibly some barred rocks or easter eggers flew their coop, & hanky panky was happening in the breeding pens. 🤭
 
Those eggs look olive to me too, but could be shadows. Next time you have breakfast, crack and peel one of the eggs in question. Then peel off the inner white membrane attached to the inner shell. If the inner shell color is an Exact blue match to the outer shell color, the eggs are indeed blue. If there is any color variation between inner and outer shell color, the egg is green. I have many Easter Eggers (including cuckoo eggers but no barred eggers), and sometimes i cant tell the shell color of the easter egger eggs until i compare inner and outer shells.

Odd your pullet came from tractor supply though, because barred rocks should be pure. Possibly some barred rocks or easter eggers flew their coop, & hanky panky was happening in the breeding pens. 🤭
Ok, will do.
 
Odd your pullet came from tractor supply though, because barred rocks should be pure. Possibly some barred rocks or easter eggers flew their coop, & hanky panky was happening in the breeding pens. 🤭
I'm guessing it was produced by the hatchery as an "Olive Egger."

Some hatchery probably crossed Cuckoo Marans and Legbars a few generations back-- that would account for the color, the single comb, and the egg color. (A first-generation cross of those breeds would also have a crest and white feet, which this pullet does not, which is why I think she's from a later generation of an olive egger breeding program.)
 
I'm guessing it was produced by the hatchery as an "Olive Egger."

Some hatchery probably crossed Cuckoo Marans and Legbars a few generations back-- that would account for the color, the single comb, and the egg color. (A first-generation cross of those breeds would also have a crest and white feet, which this pullet does not, which is why I think she's from a later generation of an olive egger breeding program.)
Sounds right, especially if @Emily_loveschickens 's Tractor Supply uses Hoovers hatchery same as my local Tractor Supply does. Hoovers offers all kinds of mixes and varieties they call "breeds". And Tractor Supply is notorious for mislabeling chick breeds when they arrive. Still curious to know the true color of the eggs!
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom