- Nov 3, 2010
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and a silver laced Wyandotte in the back .still trying to figure out what the heck I got from stromberg?![]()
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and a silver laced Wyandotte in the back .still trying to figure out what the heck I got from stromberg?![]()
Easter egger pullet left and a hatchery d'anver cockerel right .All my birds were hatched fist week in July![]()
My thought to but I've seen it look similar with silkie mixes so I don't knowQuote:
I was thinking that she looked like she had a bit of Polish in her, or is that just my imagination...? -Mustang
an americauna is a hatchery version of the purebred ameracauna. We call them Easter eggers as they are a bird of mixed heritage that will likely lay a multitude of colored eggs.What is an Easter Egger? I paid for 10 Americauna.
It's a bit complicated to explain, but I'll try to give you the short story. When blue eggs layers from South America first arrived in the U.S., they were called Araucana. Some had muffs, some had tufts, some were rumpless. In short, they were more of 'type' than a proper, consistent breed. And they laid just about every color egg. In the 1970s, the American Poultry Association accepted a breed standard for the Araucana and the Ameraucana breed. However, this left a significant number of birds that didn't meet either breed standard. These are what we now call Easter Eggers. When the breeds were recognized, hatcheries did not incorporate these new breed standards into their breeding programs. They just decided to slap the Ameraucana label on their colored egg layers. It's not that they are mixes, it's that they don't fit the recognized breed standards.What is an Easter Egger? I paid for 10 Americauna.