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Sir Sacabambaspis
Rest in peace Eda ~ 2018-2024
I'm hoping to bring these birds to life as a real landrace alongside my books!
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Thanks. It's from an Easter Egger pullet.That's a gorgeous egg!!!
If the chick was yellow as a chick, it's more then likely Wheaten based.So I have this one chick I thought was a wheaten hen... But now that I've made the discovery a few weeks ago that I have DB in my flock (specifically Butterscotch who I presume is the mother) and possibly Saffron as well since his mother might have it. Which means this presumed pullet may in fact be a cockerel. However that my friends isn't even the craziest part! Look closely at these photos of this mystery chick... I kept thinking "hey that looks like barring" followed by "there's no way, non of my current birds are barred" and yet none the less... I see what looks like the weirdest barring ever. View attachment 4309475View attachment 4309476View attachment 4309477View attachment 4309478View attachment 4309479
THAT LOOKS SO MUCH LIKE BARRINGView attachment 4309481
True, but it does look like the Piemonte (pure for DB) chicks who were where the gene arrived from like 5 generations ago, but my assumption was those had Wheaten bases. There is also the possibility of the Colombian gene, but it's far less likely. I'm guessing you're probably right and it's a wheaten base since the dad and the hen I think is the mom both have a copy of it.If the chick was yellow as a chick, it's more then likely Wheaten based.
You can have both Wheaten, & Db in the same bird(s). But this combination often leads to extension of the Buff, or Red, or Silver color into the tail.