Blue may or may not be extended black based.
Then what can it be based on and still be solid blue?
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Blue may or may not be extended black based.
Well, ameraucana breeders are very picky. With the way hatcheries are about calling EEs, americanas or araucanas when they are nowhere near the standard it is understandable. Even as poor quality a most hatchery silkies are, they usually at least bear some resemblance to the standard.Thanks guy's for all the information, I never would have thought that you could breed two ameraucanas together of different colors and not get an ameraucanas. I can see that I have a lot of reading to do on this subject. I'm gonna have to find a "Chicken Genetics for Dummies" book. lol
Quote: Pretty much any e-allele. Least likely (but not impossible) is E^Wh. Melanizers need to be added to prevent leakage.
Pretty much any e-allele. Least likely (but not impossible) is E^Wh. Melanizers need to be added to prevent leakage.
Quote: No, not really. Blue doesn't really hide things, and there are some really picky ways to figure out the likely e-allele (in addition to breeding results). Classroom-at-The-Coop has some recent threads about it.
This makes no sense to me. If you start out with pure Ameraucana's how can they have offspring that are not pure Ameraucanas? Say for instance, if a Silver X Silver cross...those babies are not Silvers? Likewise, if a *pure* Silver X *pure* black cross, those babies are now somehow mutts?? Please, make it make sense, because I cannot wrap my brain around this.as I said before if you cross anything but the colors I mentioned, you get easter eggers