OK is this really a BSL and is it really a pullet?

BrandyMom2AFew

In the Brooder
8 Years
Joined
Apr 5, 2011
Messages
72
Reaction score
0
Points
39
Location
Willamette Valley
CIMG1571.jpg


CIMG1572.jpg


CIMG1573.jpg


CIMG1586.jpg


CIMG1576.jpg
 
Both of my BSL have reddish brown in their feathers, but I know that the feathering can vary. Here are mine.
81842_100_2971.jpg
 
The yellow on the bottom of the feet are similar to my BSL but I crossed them the most common way. I used a New Hampshire Rooster over a Barred Rock Hen. My pullets are only a little over a week old and they already have some red tinting in the neck line. However, both colors of sex links have quite a color variety. This is due to the fact that there are several different breed combinations that produce color-sexable chicks.

One of the many combinations for the Black variety use a Silver Laced Wyandotte Rooster and A White Plymoth Rock Hen. They are sex link but unlike the more common varieties, this hen has silver in the neck rather than the more common red tinting.

YES IT IS A BSL AND IT IS A PULLET

Try and remeber that Sex-Link does not descride a breed but a typ of sexing done at birth called "color sexing". The hard truth is that all sex-link chickens are not pure breeds but in all reality they are mutts. They each come from combing one breed of rooster to another breed of hen, based on genetics, that produce a noticable color differrance between day old male and females.

Here is a picture of the cross I mentioned:

url



And this hatchery sells them :

https://www.esteshatchery.com/product_info.php?cPath=21_26&products_id=54
 
Awesome. I am glad I don't have to deal with two roo's and only 6 hens, LOL.

Thanks, I was slightly concerned because she was soo much bigger...
 
I hatched some BSL of my own from members of my flock. At first the Rooster was larger but now all the other chicks are bigger than him.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom