Please don't be a roo!!!

Is the Buff Silkie Hen or Rooster?

  • Hen

    Votes: 14 70.0%
  • Rooster

    Votes: 6 30.0%

  • Total voters
    20
Sexing juvenile silkies is complicated, because you can't easily see the shape of the feathers, the comb is often hidden under the crest, and wattles are not evident in most bearded silkies. Our experts vent sex (with 90% accuracy) when the babies are a day old, but for the rest of us--and even for silkie breeders--juvenile silkies are especially hard to sex. However, there are a few telltale signs that may help you discern what you have:
  • Generally the puffy crests on the hens' heads are rounder, while the roosters may have long streamers coming from theirs.
    • Sometimes males will have slightly shinier feathers.
      • If they are non-bearded Silkies, the wattles will be larger in males. (Bearded Silkies of both sexes are lacking substantial wattles.)
        • In both types of silkies, the males' comb will be larger. (A silkie's comb is called a "walnut" comb for its shape. Instead of being red like most chicken combs, it is usually a color described as "mulberry.")
          • Roosters will generally be bolder in their behavior, and often friendlier to humans when they are young. (Hens generally "catch up" in the friendliness category after they begin laying, while roosters usually get more stand-offish as they get older.)
            • If you have more than one rooster, they may "chest bump" and assert themselves with each other. However, hens will do this, too--just not as often.
              • If you have mixed hens and roosters, the roosters usually begin to grow larger more quickly than the hens, so hens may be slightly smaller after a few weeks


i dont know anything about silkies but here is somthing I found hope it helps
 
that looks like a pullet that should either be laying or getting ready to lay. do you have any other roos around?
 
yes I have many roosters around but I am having to sell them because of so many with my hens but I am replacing my roosters with silkie hens I will have only 1 rooster.
 
IF that is a cockerel having others roos around maybe why he isn't crowing cause by now if it was a cockerel it should be crowing and as you thin down on roos again IF it is a cockerel he may begin to crow

i am however leaning towards a pullet my moms 6 month old hatchery cockerels had much much bigger combs than what this one has in the pics
 
and my 20 week old roo has been crowing for weeks now , im sure you would of heard a crow by now if it was a roo 90% sure a hen
thumbsup.gif
not true mines 20 weeks and no crowing so
 

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