The Sebrights and the (likely) Old English Game Bantam came from my mother's first batch of 6 from Tractor Supply, (4 which are still alive today)...Would the ones from Tractor Supply be from a hatchery?
Yes, Tractor Supply gets them from a hatchery. So do most of the other stores that sell chicks.
the other 5 came from an Amish farm and are likely mutts of some kind because they weren't sold as any particulair breed, which is also probably why we're having so much trouble determining what breed they are, (since they're likely not one particular breed).
In that case, I've got no idea what breeds are in them.
If they lay blue or green eggs, then they are Easter Eggers. If they lay any other color eggs, then "Barnyard Mix Bantams" would be the best term for them

If the Amish farm let them run all over and hatch their own eggs, they will be more likely to go broody, and the weakest and most stupid will have already died, so you get smarter and healthier ones.
If the farm kept them safely in pens and hatched eggs in an incubator, then that's about what a hatchery would do.
That should be old enough to lay eggs, unless they are really slow maturing. Any chance they're hiding nests somewhere? It is the time of year when they're most likely to be laying.Also, I asked my mother this morning and she said that they are all probably 6-7 months old.
It happens with any kind of animal, when people raise only a few are are selecting for a bunch of special traits. If they don't remember to also select for reproductive ability, the breed eventually dies out.I think it's likely your hypothesis about why the Sebrights have so many problems is right
For rose combs, yes that's right. Looks like you'll still have to deal with whether the female lays enough eggs, and how the chicks do.Glad you explained about the rose combs, so as long as ours are persistant maters there shouldn't be a problem
I would expect so, although as you noted--chickens are individuals.Oh, got it, so they'll just lay eggs and not be broody on them, which makes sense. So we should be expecting eggs from our EEs/EE crosses very soon.
What I found about Sebrights, however, is that they usually only lay in late spring to early summer. There's a chance we could see some eggs yet this year, as it is early summer, but they also tend to not lay the first laying "season." I know most chickens lay all year round pretty much, and thus there isn't really a season, but in these chickens there is apparently.
If at some point you have Sebrights that do lay during a longer season: you want to hatch eggs from those birds!
Sometimes they just do sit that way. I don't think it indicated broodiness unless it's on a nest.pic of possible broody-looking hen in post above my post you responded to
We're hoping that they go broody enough next spring to hatch our Sebright's eggs. Do you think there's a high likely-hood of that?
I think there's a good chance, but the timing might not be right--they might go broody before the Sebright starts laying, or she might lay a few eggs and then go broody herself, or they might all go broody at the same time when you might prefer to have them spread out to hatch the eggs laid over several weeks' time.
It will certainly be interesting to see what the chicks look like if the EEs and Sebrights breed. The EE Old English Game Bantam mix will be interesting to see as well. I'll probably post pics of the chicks on BYC if and when the chicks are hatched![]()
I'd like to see pictures of chicks, whenever such chicks come to exist
