I had gotten store eggs a while back NN's but a hen sat on them broke one and wrecked the lot. My son got married in Montana and his in-laws had NN, I have 3 of their eggs in incubator, wish me luck.
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I had gotten store eggs a while back NN's but a hen sat on them broke one and wrecked the lot. My son got married in Montana and his in-laws had NN, I have 3 of their eggs in incubator, wish me luck.
I had gotten store eggs a while back NN's but a hen sat on them broke one and wrecked the lot. My son got married in Montana and his in-laws had NN, I have 3 of their eggs in incubator, wish me luck.
What do you guys think of using them for a meat pen at county 4H and possibly state fair? In hoping to get them in the next month or so, at county they would be 5-6 months and state 6 1/2 to 7 1/2 months
What do you guys think of using them for a meat pen at county 4H and possibly state fair? In hoping to get them in the next month or so, at county they would be 5-6 months and state 6 1/2 to 7 1/2 months
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Lavender are genetically a solid black chicken "with lavender added". In short, black is dominant over just about everything else. (over simplifying it) so the results of the cross would be black chicks, eventually feathering out mostly black with either silver or brown 'details'- much like black sex links... color on the neck, lacing on the breast, red or silver saddle and wing areas on the roosters.
There's some quibbling grounds but yes, basically a lavender Aloha would look exactly as or similar to porcelain as on porcelain mille fleur. The quibbling ground is basically the presence of a black bar between the white mottle tip and buff feather. Many of the birds in the Aloha project lack this black bar, so some might object to calling that porcelain the same as in milles but technically it is the same thing..
on a mille the feather is like this- white mottle tip-black bar-buff feather.
on procelain it is like this- white mottle tip-lavendar bar-pastel buff feather.
On the aloha without the black bar, the feather is a white mottle tip-buff feather. On a lavender version it would be mottle tip-pastel buff feather. The lavender grey shade would show on their tail.
I admit to not knowing the genetic difference between presence of the black bar vs absence of black bar.....
p.s. unfortunately the term porcelain is getting wider usage... It's already been applied to things like a lavender buff, lavender black tail buff etc. so if you see a porcelain that looks nothing like a porcelain mille, don't worry about it too much..
I do get that F1 chicks will all be black - what would be the best avenue to get the lav/lav Alohas (lavender/buff mottling), then? F1xF1? I assume line breeding with dad will just give you more black, though it will afford 50% with lav/lav.... But then what...
(I am really getting to too many males already, so I'm trying to keep the numbers of males around limited. Not ideal for breeding options, but I don't want to get shut down for a noise complaint, either. We are allowed roosters, but I don't want to be the reason they are banned later due to them being a nuisance, of course!!!!)
Too bad I don't have a big farm.![]()
- Ant Farm
I do get that F1 chicks will all be black - what would be the best avenue to get the lav/lav Alohas (lavender/buff mottling), then? F1xF1? I assume line breeding with dad will just give you more black, though it will afford 50% with lav/lav.... But then what...
(I am really getting to too many males already, so I'm trying to keep the numbers of males around limited. Not ideal for breeding options, but I don't want to get shut down for a noise complaint, either. We are allowed roosters, but I don't want to be the reason they are banned later due to them being a nuisance, of course!!!!)
Too bad I don't have a big farm.![]()
- Ant Farm
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Thanks - that does make sense! My head wasn't wrapping itself around it...![]()
- Ant Farm
@I Love Layers
I think it'd be a great project, if you knew where the projects stock began from I'm sure they'd show out quite well, you'd be in the sweet spot for market age imo, there are a few broiler lines of NN I think could fit the SOP for NNs while also competing in a market program. I think it's all about nutrition at that point. I won the commercial market program at the central florida fair for two years in '11-'12 using Wyandottes in a pen, so it's certain plausible to beat any of the "classic" market choices around.
Edited; I showed Wyandottes for market, Rocks for laying pens! Whoops!