you have girls, and beautiful little ladies!
hey betsy, here are the kids from the one pen- the white one is a surprise - not sure where that one came from!LOL!
and the little buff i got from you is broody!
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you have girls, and beautiful little ladies!
just broke my heart when she lost that baby- its been 2 years and she is finally broody again- she has stayed at the perimeter of the flock since then- now she is in the fav nestbox and isn't giving an inchOh Robin. These are the times that try a chicken woman's soul.
Girls? I would have thought boys because of all of the comb showing and the direction of the head poof.
Bless her heart!just broke my heart when she lost that baby- its been 2 years and she is finally broody again- she has stayed at the perimeter of the flock since then- now she is in the fav nestbox and isn't giving an inch
I also have heard from several people that older males will produce a larger percentage of female offspring, and have found that to be true in my own experience. I haven't done a scientific experiment, though. A lot of the breeders I know will only use a rooster one or two years, and they seem to always get a predominance of males. I get attached to my birds and usually don't replace the males unless I get a much better one or the older one gets injured or sick--or particularly mean.
Do you eat any of your birds? Might seem like a strange question.
I know some bantam Cochin breeders eat their culls and say they are quite tasty. Male Cochins are about 2 lb. and females average 1 1/2 to 1 3/4 lbs before processing but your bantams are smaller than that. (I can't bring myself to eat my own birds but if someone else would want to I think I could be ok with that.)