junebuggena
Crowing
All girls, and you have an Easter Egger, not Ameraucana.Please tell me these are all hens. Ameracauna, bantam and australop, 13-14 weeks old. View attachment 1063509 View attachment 1063510 View attachment 1063511
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All girls, and you have an Easter Egger, not Ameraucana.Please tell me these are all hens. Ameracauna, bantam and australop, 13-14 weeks old. View attachment 1063509 View attachment 1063510 View attachment 1063511
YesCmom & junebuggena were you commenting on all 10? You thinking all are pullets with possible question on the one buckeye? I am literally holding my breath.....
The ones with a darker shade of buff developing on the shoulder area are your likely cockerels.I have 6-7 week old Buff Brahmas. I still can't tell if they're pullets or cocks. Aside from one that is more feathered in, I can't really make much of a distinction as this is my first experience with this breed
View attachment 1063887Image 1 above, you can see the one on the bottom is a bit more feathered out.
View attachment 1063888 2. Two above, the combs that look the most different.
View attachment 1063894 3. The three that are most similarly feathered, less than the fourth one.
View attachment 1063896 4. A good look at the three least feathered
View attachment 1063898 5. Photo of all four
View attachment 1063899 6. Another photo of all four.
View attachment 10639007. Two of the less feathered chicks.
they're 16 weeksAge? Need a better shot of the Buff. Can't tell if that's a darker shade of buff through the wing/shoulder or just the shadows.
The Buff is definitely a pullet. The Isabel one might be a cockerel. The Self-Blue/Lavender gene can cause brittle feathers making it difficult to distinguish male feathering from damage feathers.