Pennsylvania!! Unite!!

She’s gorgeous! I hope she will be beautiful for whoever gets her. Do you really think she will turn out that way with a royal palm father? I’ll have to look up turkey charts...

Go play with Porter's color calculator. I've hatched so many red bronze from my girls lol. I've run the calculator before with bourbon red over royal palm and I'm almost 100% positive that red bronze is the result. I was surprised at first expecting a red palm or something but that wasn't the case.
 
@dheltzel have you found the silkie feathered lavender ameraucanas to be more fragile than most other breeds? I've hatched about 4 of them and so far, lost 2. I'm not sure what to make of that.
I have found them to be of rather frail constitutions. I am hoping to correct that by crossing to regular lavenders and blacks. The cross to lavenders last year went very well, they eggs I'm hatching now are better shaped and colored, plus a lot more of them. Only a percentage are silkied, but enough to get a breeding pen of the improved ones going, and to cross 1 cockerel into the blacks for this year's improvement.
 
Sometimes we come across a dog that we wish we could keep forever.
True that!!
I've been fortunate to have 2 of them. The first was Lassie, but boyhood dog and closest confidant. I was so sure none could ever match her I was indifferent about getting a dog until my daughter got our current dog, Beau. He is a trained therapy dog for my daughter, but he will fill that role for anyone that has the good fortune to meet him.
 
Why on earth am I seeing bullseyes on only a few eggs?
The rooster may be aging, or have a couple of favored hens who satisfy his urge so others aren't covered, or he or the girls may be heavily feathered on the back end which can interfere in successful mating.
What’s the deal with sexing Silkies? Can you do it by size alone? I bought a bunch of Silkies from TSC several weeks ago. Clearly one is a boy, because it’s much fatter and bigger than the others. But does that suggest that the rest are all females?

I’m curious to see how I did guessing the sex of the leghorn chicks too that were on clearance. Looks like mostly female, buts it still early.
Silkie are tough to tell until they crow or lay an egg, though a cockerel does tend to have more pronounced wattles and a wider comb at a younger age...it just isn't as cut and dried as most other breeds. We have a current broody who I was 80% convinced was a rooster till I caught her in an egg box finally.
Roosters also can get longer feathery tufts on the back of their head at a few months. But again, it can be very subtle and not all get them, so still only a maybe thing.
 
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I have found them to be of rather frail constitutions. I am hoping to correct that by crossing to regular lavenders and blacks. The cross to lavenders last year went very well, they eggs I'm hatching now are better shaped and colored, plus a lot more of them. Only a percentage are silkied, but enough to get a breeding pen of the improved ones going, and to cross 1 cockerel into the blacks for this year's improvement.

Ok, I just wanted to make sure that it wasn't just me, thank you. I'm using a silkie feathered roo over split hens this time and will probably raise out a black roo that is split to lavender and silkie feathers to cover the girls next time around. Egg size and shape is much better from the split girls this year but they're still green tinted. I'll be putting any silkied hens that I grow out this year under a really awesome roo from last year's hatches to make some new splits and work on the egg color/shape more :)
 
:hitI last night close to dusk, two of my turkeys were missing. A red and my favorite mottled black. I assume they had just gone off to lay some eggs, since the one has done that before. The bourbon red was back this morning, but the mottled Black was not. I’m hoping she just went broody and is hunkered down somewhere.

I saw her wandering off to th woods the other day, and I assumed she was laying eggs somewhere back there. But I never saw where the nest was.

I need thermal goggles to find her. :hmm
 
Ok, I just wanted to make sure that it wasn't just me, thank you. I'm using a silkie feathered roo over split hens this time and will probably raise out a black roo that is split to lavender and silkie feathers to cover the girls next time around. Egg size and shape is much better from the split girls this year but they're still green tinted. I'll be putting any silkied hens that I grow out this year under a really awesome roo from last year's hatches to make some new splits and work on the egg color/shape more :)
Sounds like a good plan. Working independently for a few generations will make our flocks good candidates for swapping eggs or chicks in the future to enhance the genetic diversity. I have noticed differences in the black and lavender lines I bought from John Blehm 2 years ago. Neither lay without additional lighting, but the lavenders start laying sooner when the lights are added. The blacks take longer to ramp up, but easily out lay the lavenders over time. The eggs from the blacks are larger and bluer also. That is my reason for wanting to cross my newest silkied chicks over some of the pure blacks, to improve the eggs even more.
IDK if silkieds will ever become really popular, but if I can get them to survive and lay like the blacks, then I can market them easily. For now, I refuse to sell the silkieds to anyone that is not either an experienced breeder or a "crazy chicken lady" (you know the type, spare no expense to make the birds happy). First time chicken owners find them cute, but heed my warnings about getting roos and them not surviving well (at least the original strain). Actually, anyone that had kept silkie bantams successfully for a while would also be a great candidate, they seem very similar to me -- minus the propensity silkie bantam roos have for turning mean.
 

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