Pullets or..? Help, I know nothing about Wyandottes

TattooedMama

Songster
11 Years
Apr 2, 2014
540
82
246
California
I recently purchased two Wyandottes (a gold and a silver laced) who I hope to be pullets. These are my first Wyandottes, I only have Orps other than these two and I find the Wyandottes more difficult to sex. Best guesses from those with experience are appreciated!! These chicks are between 7-10 weeks according to the breeder.



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Awwww what a gorgeous golden laced Wyandotte, it looks roo ish though. See how the pattern doesn't really extent to the head and the wattle is coming in larger and quick. (It is still early though) The silver laced looks like a pullet. My Silver never even grew a comb.
 
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Thanks guys!!

Ugh on the Golden Laced, that was the one I was really concerned about. I spent over 20 minutes picking that golden laced!! Every bird I looked at looked like a cockerel to me. I finally had to realize maybe that's how they look and just picked one. (S)he had a cool feather pattern, not normal gold laced and would be considered a defect by a breeder but these were just supposed to be fun egg layers and I liked it. This one was more on the conservative side concerning wattles and comb of the 50+ Golden laced they had, of which they claim 80% pullets. Some had less wattles and comb but they were more orange-y in color and I really wanted a richer color. I really hope its not a rooster, I just barely got lucky & sold two unwanted roosters this week =/
 
Thanks guys!!

Ugh on the Golden Laced, that was the one I was really concerned about. I spent over 20 minutes picking that golden laced!! Every bird I looked at looked like a cockerel to me. I finally had to realize maybe that's how they look and just picked one. (S)he had a cool feather pattern, not normal gold laced and would be considered a defect by a breeder but these were just supposed to be fun egg layers and I liked it. This one was more on the conservative side concerning wattles and comb of the 50+ Golden laced they had, of which they claim 80% pullets. Some had less wattles and comb but they were more orange-y in color and I really wanted a richer color. I really hope its not a rooster, I just barely got lucky & sold two unwanted roosters this week =/
I think if you are looking for a more bold color (red instead of orange) you should look for BLRW, which stands for blue laced red Wyandotte, but black and splash are also products in trying for this color.
 
I think if you are looking for a more bold color (red instead of orange) you should look for BLRW, which stands for blue laced red Wyandotte, but black and splash are also products in trying for this color.
They had some BLRW where I went but they didn't have any I liked, you could say I am picky. I like the GLW and that is what my husband wanted. Some of them just had a more appealing color than others. This place was a home-grown hatchery sort of deal, they run it off their property. The color differentiation in his flock was all over the place from faded yellow/gold to a mahogany.

Do you also put your vote toward cockerel for the GLW?
 
I'm not really super familiar with the rose comb and identifying boys from girls.

That is awful red for so young, but my cockerels had more growth by this point, and not just a color change. I haven't really researched them much because they weren't something I was expecting to get! And the one I do still have (the other three were either cockerels and have long been dog food or the pullet that I sold and promptly was eaten by their dog) doesn't look much like a SLW like it's supposed to.

Isn't there a difference between male and female patterning? If that's the case, that one has some mighty beautiful patterning to be a girl bird, kwim?
 
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I'm not really super familiar with the rose comb and identifying boys from girls.

That is awful red for so young, but my cockerels had more growth by this point, and not just a color change. I haven't really researched them much because they weren't something I was expecting to get! And the one I do still have (the other three were either cockerels and have long been dog food or the pullet that I sold and promptly was eaten by their dog) doesn't look much like a SLW like it's supposed to.

Isn't there a difference between male and female patterning? If that's the case, that one has some mighty beautiful patterning to be a girl bird, kwim?
When next to each other the SLW & GLW appear to have the same pinkish tinge, maybe only slightly more on the GLW. Other than that the GLW certainly has more wattles. My orpingtons are really my only experience with sexing. I am on my third batch of babies (the first I purchased at 8 weeks) and I have found that males get pink and red starting at 3 weeks or so if you look under their chin at their barely there wattles. AFter that wattles and comb grow fast. I started to think one of my black hens was a roo a few weeks ago because they got red earlier than my other hens did. I think some lines just develop differently and I seem to have read here often on old posts that hatchery GLW develop somewhat different than breeder birds. Once I got my second batch of Orpington babies, I was almost certain the first breeder lied to me about the age of the chocolates I bought from her because my blues grew at a phenomenal rate but this 3rd batch grows slow as well. Such a pain guessing the sex and I really hope this GLW is a pullet =/
 
Isn't there a difference between male and female patterning? If that's the case, that one has some mighty beautiful patterning to be a girl bird, kwim?
I'm not sure I have heard of them having different patterning. I know this bird has almost a penciling (design inside feather) and that is a fault, not typical in a breeding quality GLW.
 
I'm not sure I have heard of them having different patterning. I know this bird has almost a penciling (design inside feather) and that is a fault, not typical in a breeding quality GLW.

the double lacing/penciling in the feather can go away as they molt over time. they have mini molts around 3 and 6 mos and a full molt around 12-16mos. I agree the GLW looks male, the SLW looks female. sorry!
 

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