Pennsylvania!! Unite!!

Still no sexlink chicks? That's sad. It really depends on the types of your customers if CG will sell. I think they are great choice for livestock and egg color variation, but not popular pets, although I heard that they can be tamed.

3 chicks hatched last weekend (from 22 eggs set originally). 2 are brown - very cute, but I'm puzzling over the genetics of that, the EB of the hens should have over-ridden any brown or birchen chick down colors. The remaining black chick looks like a pullet (no headspot) and I will confirm in a few days when her primaries start growing in (hope they are all black, no barring). The 13th is a large hatch, I set 60 BSL eggs and so far 17 are still viable. That's only 28% fertility, but enough chicks to get a good feel for how they are sexing out.

The hatch I'm hoping to get your chicks from has 103 BSL eggs. If I don't get at least 1 really nice pullet chick for you from all those, I will be very disappointed.

Anyone know offhand how long it takes after introducing a new roo before the eggs could be "his"? I think it's only a few days, but I intend to set only the newest eggs on Friday on the hope that he has had enough time to increase the fertility of the flock. I'm thinking I will collect eggs from day 4 and onward, hopefully that will be about 75 eggs to set and see if he has had as big an impact of fertility as I hope.
 
3 chicks hatched last weekend (from 22 eggs set originally). 2 are brown - very cute, but I'm puzzling over the genetics of that, the EB of the hens should have over-ridden any brown or birchen chick down colors. The remaining black chick looks like a pullet (no headspot) and I will confirm in a few days when her primaries start growing in (hope they are all black, no barring). The 13th is a large hatch, I set 60 BSL eggs and so far 17 are still viable. That's only 28% fertility, but enough chicks to get a good feel for how they are sexing out.

The hatch I'm hoping to get your chicks from has 103 BSL eggs. If I don't get at least 1 really nice pullet chick for you from all those, I will be very disappointed.

Anyone know offhand how long it takes after introducing a new roo before the eggs could be "his"? I think it's only a few days, but I intend to set only the newest eggs on Friday on the hope that he has had enough time to increase the fertility of the flock. I'm thinking I will collect eggs from day 4 and onward, hopefully that will be about 75 eggs to set and see if he has had as big an impact of fertility as I hope.
Brown sexlinks? That sounds strange. Are you sure their father is not the next door neighbor (legbars, welsummers, etc.)?
wink.png
 
Brown sexlinks? That sounds strange. Are you sure their father is not the next door neighbor (legbars, welsummers, etc.)?
wink.png

Father should be a Wheaten Am, but could be a Lavender Am. I don't fully understand the color genetics of Wheaten, but RIR are wheaten down and they are the #1 roo for making regular black sexlinks (with BR hens). I suppose the Wheaten Am could have something else going on, but those chicks hatch yellow (wheaten). All the other possible roos are wild-type and I know they are recessive to EB.

It's a mystery, which is not bad, something to understand that I do not now. I sold 1 of the brown chicks the day it hatched (a kid wanted it and I couldn't say no to a kid !) and am going to try to keep the other (and the black one) for a few weeks.

Did I mention that 4 Bielefelders hatched? 2 pair.
 
Okay so this is a question about the other end of a chickens life. As soon as I catch the ODB he's losing his head. I have two groups of chickens (currently) both have roosters and both groups are housed separately. When the one group loses there rooster would it be a good time to incorporate both groups? One group is 6 hens and a roo thats gonna be soup and the other is 3 hens and a roo (the CCL's I got from dheltzel). Losing the top of the pecking order should make them reshuffle things so I would think it would be a good time to add some to it. Thoughts?
 
Okay so this is a question about the other end of a chickens life. As soon as I catch the ODB he's losing his head. I have two groups of chickens (currently) both have roosters and both groups are housed separately. When the one group loses there rooster would it be a good time to incorporate both groups? One group is 6 hens and a roo thats gonna be soup and the other is 3 hens and a roo (the CCL's I got from dheltzel). Losing the top of the pecking order should make them reshuffle things so I would think it would be a good time to add some to it. Thoughts?

Integration of adults is always stressful, but I would prefer it before pecking order lines are redrawn also...
 
Jo and chicks are in our playpen brooder for a couple of days since we picked up 13 young roosters to butcher for a friend and they are currently occupying the spare pen and causing a ruckus...much quieter in the brooder until tomorrow then they will go back out to the coop.
 
The California Greys I am using to make blue egg laying black sexlinks have not been very fertile. I was suspecting the roos, but waited since they were 6 months old only yesterday, so it could have just been the pullets were too young. Anyway, today I swapped in my main black ameraucana roo that kept 15 hens fertile last year. I watched him off and on and he's taking to his new assignment with great enthusiasm. LOL. I'm thinking he can single-handedly take on the needs of all 24 pullets, or maybe I will pull out 4 pullets to put with a CG roo and get pure CG's to sell. That would leave the black Am with 20 pullets. He firmly believes he is up to the challenge. I have some other roos in there, but they are silkied Ams and don't seem to be doing the job. Some of them may come out tomorrow, if I can find a better place to put them.

Anyone else take advantage of the sunny day to clean pens? The snow made some areas really wet, I was up to my ankles in turkey poo. At least it's done for now.


Well of he's anything like the men I know, that Black Am has some Italian in him. :oops:

We tend to run a little behind the rest of the state weather wise, just getting our really warm temps and sunshine today. I do have some muddy runs, but I made the mistake of storing my straw in a shelter that is in the middle of 2 very snowy acres out front and I just don't have it in me to go trudging out there and have to climb the fence to boot. So the birds will have to make due.

 

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