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- #11
I have had then for about 16 and a half weeks. I picked up all three at the feed store as day old chicks, or supposed day old chicks, they were all tiny little fluff balls. The one that is in the middle of the pic of all three is the sex link, and I'm pretty sure she is my layer. I have been out there all morning and she has been up in the coop struggling to lay an egg. The first egg I got yesterday was a weird soft shell thing that was actually two eggs attached together. I posed pics of the buff a bit over a week ago and most of the people that responded then thought she was a hen.
With all that said I have a hell of a time getting pics of the australorp, it is hard to get a good picture of her being so dark, and she runs away. She is the quietest of my bunch at least when I can see them. The one making the most racket when I can see them in the buff, but it is all these little bawk bawk and what sounds like the egg song. I just wish I could get whichever did the crowing to do it in front of me. As long as it is just that once in the morning I won't get rid of the bird until I know for sure one way or another if it is a roo or a hen. If it starts to crow all through the day I will have to get rid of it no matter what sex it is.
Why can't the darn chickens have their sex organs on the outside like the rest of us. It sure would make things a lot easier. I will try to trick the australorp into posing for me and if I can get decent pics I will post more. So do roosters ever sing the egg song? Like I said that is something else that made me think that the buff is a pullet.
Thanks for all of the input, but I think it is still a mystery from all the responses so far.
With all that said I have a hell of a time getting pics of the australorp, it is hard to get a good picture of her being so dark, and she runs away. She is the quietest of my bunch at least when I can see them. The one making the most racket when I can see them in the buff, but it is all these little bawk bawk and what sounds like the egg song. I just wish I could get whichever did the crowing to do it in front of me. As long as it is just that once in the morning I won't get rid of the bird until I know for sure one way or another if it is a roo or a hen. If it starts to crow all through the day I will have to get rid of it no matter what sex it is.
Why can't the darn chickens have their sex organs on the outside like the rest of us. It sure would make things a lot easier. I will try to trick the australorp into posing for me and if I can get decent pics I will post more. So do roosters ever sing the egg song? Like I said that is something else that made me think that the buff is a pullet.
Thanks for all of the input, but I think it is still a mystery from all the responses so far.