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You are more right than wrong, but we are the victims of a trickster that just likes to torment us. Not sure why people do this, but it would take me hatching about 75 to 100 brown coturnix to come up with 3 androgynous roos.
Could someone please explain, what satisfaction, anyone can derive from this?
OBVIOUSLY AN TRICKSTER WOULD ENJOY THIS WITH SADISTIC GLEE...........
Yes, and I have caught young males that I thought were hens laughing at me a few times and vice versa. Down right chuckling.
Then stand there and look ever so innocent.
Tricksters indeed, I think they do it themselves, on purpose. The coloring and weird speckling I mean. I try to cull them out as I find them, but they seem to be the ones that start to lay and breed later in their lives. And those few, M/F they look alike until they get much older.
I think it comes from crossing different lines or adding new blood lines, even of the same coloring. It may be a stage in the combining of the genetics that they go through. These being the ones that reject the genetic combination. Or maybe they are the result of the combination of the blood lines. Or extend that many years forward and this happens. Because I know there has been no new blood added to my birds for many years and I got them in my first 2 batches, but none of my hatches, so far...ohhh,have to think on what I have done... But I don't have enough experience to see if any of those quesses are anywhere near right. That's one thing I want to play with to check my quesses out. After I send my eggs out.
Could be they are just changing. Wouldn't surprise me, everytime you turn around they mutate in some way. The more people that raise them the more they are going to change, too. Cause I think they are little tricksters and they just want to have fun. And they have had centurys to learn how to have fun with us.