Quote:
I don't know if your chicken is a hen or rooster, I'm just trying to say that the type (3-row or single pea comb) is not an accurate sex-determining factor. I don't have any roosters, but based on what I've heard from others, I'm guessing that most of them have the 3-row comb. I'm wanting to let people know that some of the hens have that type of comb too.
This is the same EE as pictured above (with the 3-row pea comb) 2 1/2 weeks later (22 1/2 weeks of age), the week she started laying. Her comb changed a lot in those couple weeks.
Both hens together - very similar (age 22 1/2 weeks), but different comb types:
Here's a close-up of another one of my EE pullets at 23 weeks of age with a single row pea comb (a few days before she laid her first egg). This is just an example of the difference in combs once they reach maturity.
I don't know if your chicken is a hen or rooster, I'm just trying to say that the type (3-row or single pea comb) is not an accurate sex-determining factor. I don't have any roosters, but based on what I've heard from others, I'm guessing that most of them have the 3-row comb. I'm wanting to let people know that some of the hens have that type of comb too.
This is the same EE as pictured above (with the 3-row pea comb) 2 1/2 weeks later (22 1/2 weeks of age), the week she started laying. Her comb changed a lot in those couple weeks.

Both hens together - very similar (age 22 1/2 weeks), but different comb types:

Here's a close-up of another one of my EE pullets at 23 weeks of age with a single row pea comb (a few days before she laid her first egg). This is just an example of the difference in combs once they reach maturity.
