you can't even breed a chicken and a duck, so what makes a peacock and a chicken anymore possible.
It has a lot to do with how related they are, rather like how a horse can cross with a donkey or a zebra but not with a cow or a goat.
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you can't even breed a chicken and a duck, so what makes a peacock and a chicken anymore possible.
I think that it looks cool either way! I was just commenting on why chicken/duck breeding doesn't usually work out.I still think it's photoshopped
Not even my mom and nana say its real, but that's my opinion.
The first post in the thread was May 4, 2013 (posts have a date on them.)
OP offered to ask the owner for more information, and reported back with some, so it must have been current at the time.
I love love love your avatar!I still think it's photoshopped
Not even my mom and nana say its real, but that's my opinion.
Yeah not sure about a bantam hen , but....I think it could work with a regular sized chook!Don't believe it @Crestcrazy2, you cant breed a chicken and peacock, the peacock would hurt the banty hen!
Thanks, it's the baby girl I lost, HeraI love love love your avatar!
Oh sorry for your loss !Thanks, it's the baby girl I lost, Hera
I was emailing with a lady that I know, giving her some photography advice. She showed me a picture that she took of one of her birds, and said that it was a peacock x chicken. Here's what she said to me(by the way, they call the bird Twisted Sister):
"She's one of a kind. Her mother was a red banty hen (Rhode Island Red). We had this chicken for years and she never laid a single egg. We didn't have any roosters and our neighbors didn't either. We did have a lot of Peacocks. One year the Banty legged some eggs and hatched several chicks. They looked a little different and grew so fast!!!! Only one survived (we have lot of Owls, Fox and other animals who kill the chickens) and it was Twisted Sister. We finally figured out the father was our white Peacock. For years, Twisted Sister had the body type and size of a Peacock female but she was red like her mother. As time went on, she got more and more white feathers. In the past two years, she had turned almost all white...Twisted Sister has never laid an egg but her mother was a late bloomer so who knows. She is at least 8 or 9 years old now."
After searching Google for quite a while last night, I found multiple results for peacocks x other things, but only one for peacock x chicken. Here is the photo of it(hybrid on the left, it's mother on the right), taken in 1929.
And here is Twisted Sister.
Has anyone ever seen one of these before? I thought it was very interesting.
I know right !Wow, that's pretty cool.
Most poultry can breed with each other. Resulting offspring aren't common, have short lifespans and are sterile, but it's becoming very common with people wanting to breed themShe must be photoshopped, that can't happen, you can't even breed a chicken and a duck, so what makes a peacock and a chicken anymore possible.