Peafowl questions

Kessel23

Hi Bug
7 Years
Feb 6, 2018
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Wisconsin
I was supposed to get some peafowl in June but the hatchery never shipped them. They just kept making up excuses until we demanded a refund. Next June I am going to try and get peachicks again from a different hatchery. This hatchery, McMurray, sells them in assortments so I do not get to choose which varieties I get. Here is the list of colors and patterns that I could get-
Screenshot 2018-10-01 at 10.02.38 AM.png

I have never heard of Buff Spalding or Cameo pied so I need someone to confirm that those are actually real varieties of peafowl. I am assuming that the Cameo pied is just Cameo in color and pied as it's pattern, but what the heck is a Buff Spalding?

I also wanted to know what kind of winter housing I would need for peafowl. Would I need a heated area if I got spaldings? If I do I could use one of my dog kennels, we heat them up to 70* F during the winter, would that be alright or do they need it to be warmer?
I am hoping to just get all Indian peafowl colors, what kind of housing will they need as adults during the winter? I have a insulated coop and just from the body heat released from the chickens and turkeys in the other section it usually stays above freezing inside. I could also keep heat lamps on them if they need it. I could also put up some wind blocking panels on the run if they needed it, if I got spaldings I would be keeping them in a dog kennel in our barn that has 3 sections. There is a section in the back of the barn that is heated and insulated and that one has a dog door that leads into a old horse stable inside the barn that is not heated or insulated but has walls on all 4 sides. The horse stable has a dog door that leads to an outside run. I was thinking I could just have the heated area be the coop and the stable be the run for the spalding in the winter and block off the third part so they cannot get outside.
I live in southern wisconsin so it gets below 0* F here during the winters pretty often.
 
The color RED 'buff' comes from the green peacock!
In the center ... a feather of Pavo muticus ... green peacock!


IMG_9764.JPG


Here a VERY rare spalding high percentage ... barred (NOT black shoulder) ... with a lot of 'Red buff'color .

006.JPG


The color 'buff' on a female spalding black shoulder is visible all her life long ... on males spalding black shoulder is only visible in his young age ... after moulting, at the age of 4 years it's less visible!

00410.jpg
 
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Red Buff Spauldings are normally Black Shoulder and look like these.
I think the hens are the most beautiful in all of the peafowl.
View attachment 1549228 View attachment 1549229 View attachment 1549230

Cameo Pied White Eye look like this.
View attachment 1549231
Wow, thanks, those birds look amazing!
Cameo is one of my favorite colors in peafowl, it looks awesome with the pied and white eyed pattern, unfortunately it is the least favorite for everyone else in my family. They will be real upset if we get all cameos but I would love it :lol:
The color RED 'buff' comes from the green peacock!
In the center ... a feather of Pavo muticus ... green peacock!


View attachment 1549235
Here a VERY rare spalding high percentage ... barred (NOT black shoulder) ... with a lot of 'Red buff'color .

View attachment 1549223

The color 'buff' on a female spalding black shoulder is visible all her life long ... on males spalding black shoulder is only visible in his young age ... after moulting, at the age of 4 years it's less visible!

00410.jpg
That is interesting, it is nice to know that what they call the "Buff" spalding is a real variety of peafowl.
 
I have a 3+ month old peahen. Can a peahen get the berserker syndrome like the Male can at 6 months of age? Not really sure if I need to stop the hand feeding and close contact. Let me know. Thank you!
 
Wow, thanks, those birds look amazing!
Cameo is one of my favorite colors in peafowl, it looks awesome with the pied and white eyed pattern, unfortunately it is the least favorite for everyone else in my family. They will be real upset if we get all cameos but I would love it :lol:

That is interesting, it is nice to know that what they call the "Buff" spalding is a real variety of peafowl.
Visit Spring Creek Peafowl on FaceBook for more pictures and birds available for sale. I can mail you some very young birds now if you like.
 
I have a 3+ month old peahen. Can a peahen get the berserker syndrome like the Male can at 6 months of age? Not really sure if I need to stop the hand feeding and close contact. Let me know. Thank you!
Usually, the hens do not get aggressive like the cocks but they will get very bossy to the other birds. I do not recommend imprinting cocks but the hens can be really fun to imprint. I have about four imprinted hens that are very fun to handle but they do present problems being bossy to the other hens in any pen they are in, they are much better being free range.
IMG_1700.JPG

This is Sweepea, she raises very tame chicks.
IMG_5218 (2).JPG
 
Visit Spring Creek Peafowl on FaceBook for more pictures and birds available for sale. I can mail you some very young birds now if you like.
I will definitely check it out, I do not think I am going to get any new birds this year though, it is already getting down to 40*F here. Next spring is when I am planning to get them, I also need to prepare some more stuff for them.
 
@Kessel23 I'm in ND & just got my chicks this year. (they are inside the coop) I picked out older ones (14 weeks) so that they made the trip and would be ok in the coop for the winter. Last fall I actually got chicks from Wisconsin (Rhinelander?) they are bronze white eye and bronze BS. If thats close & you want his contact info let me know :) I'm a newbie but instead of ordering from a hatchery I decided on a couple reputable breeders that raised colors I liked and went with that. (didn't want to chance not getting the colors I wanted) If you're on facebook check out the group Peacocks only theres a lot of breeders out there that ship all over the US. or check out the UnitedPeafowlAssociation.org for breeders, colors & info.
 
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