- Feb 9, 2009
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You already have my take on this and I have been waiting to reply hoping some silkie pros would jump in.
After seeing the pictures...I still conclude that you are going to need to weed out the problem the long way. The second option is to put in a new splash roo to add new blood.
Personally, I would consider saving money for a quality blue roo or better yet something black to rejuvenate your colors. If you get a black hen and cross with your present splash roo...if you still get 'white' chicks, you know your problem is the roo with hidden white gene.
I think I am rambling...
Edited to say...might be the headache.
After seeing the pictures...I still conclude that you are going to need to weed out the problem the long way. The second option is to put in a new splash roo to add new blood.
Personally, I would consider saving money for a quality blue roo or better yet something black to rejuvenate your colors. If you get a black hen and cross with your present splash roo...if you still get 'white' chicks, you know your problem is the roo with hidden white gene.
I think I am rambling...
Edited to say...might be the headache.
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