I dont know about your other questions, but if you use a barred male, since they carry 2 copies of the barring gene, females will be barred in some capacity
Oh right. Sorry, that was a dumb question.
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I dont know about your other questions, but if you use a barred male, since they carry 2 copies of the barring gene, females will be barred in some capacity
How did you make your blue barred pullets?
Quote: I THINK I have 2 black roos from Scott. They have DARK legs but it might improve with my GSBR pullets. I have to go through that pen and FIND them. LOTS of black birds in that pen. LOL
I will use his roos in a few months and see what I get leg color wise. I want to get some chicks one the ground from these guys first.
The Black Plymouth Rock isn't as popular in the U.S. as a Barred or White Rock but here is a Rooster and a Hen from a Germany site.
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Quote: I personally would not want to deal with the red leakage from that cross. I have partridge rocks too..... they are for another PROJECT COLOR![]()
I can deal with the silver leakage I have now. I will cull for it in the next generation so it should clean up pretty quick.
Quote: Or you can start with a solid roo over barred pullets. No issues there![]()
My pullet from Scott looked birchen, very pretty but that was a lot of silver to work with. I could have made some sex links silver males (when I say that I don't mean you can sex them at hatch) but didn't want to go through that. I sold her. She really wanted a roo too but she can not breed where she is at. Scotts roos are MASSIVE BIG. I think I will use them just to get some size in mine. (I think the GSBR genes in mine will pump them up too)