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Your welcome Cari.
They've lost some of the broad breasted look and start shooting upward before getting to this age; but the breast feels full when doing a check by feel rather than eye. This bird and the one hatched last Nov. are nearly identical now, so I asssume this one will be larger and fuller. Its hard to know for sure, but I suspect that by breeding age they will be wider and thicker, yet still young enough to be suitable for the table at that time. So far, all of them would have been at fryer processing size at or before 14 weeks; though certainly smaller than, but more like a Freedom Ranger in body type. Hopefully my Easter hatch will have crosses from the Dark Cornish................... and still hoping the male CX has managed to fertilize an egg or two; I'm thinking either of those two crosses will add some width to the project.
I also have a much nicer and larger White Ameraucana roo to work with now. I'm not sure if I want to raise another batch of CX for breeding and the freezer or not; but suspect the last two living CX hens will produce few, if any, eggs [there's three in the bator now]. The last CX hen to die had a blue comb for a few days; but I also found a broken thigh bone when I processed her for the dogs. Proper management would require a seperate pen to rigidly restrict their diets; with a pair of roos penned and fed seperately and given only a day or two with them per week.
The big CX roo is limping very badly after going airborn in an attempt to fight the Ameraucana through the fence, but he's still attempting to cover his girls. I think the big red cockeral from Katy that I hatched may be his replacement later this year; and suspicion he'll be built better for successful breeding.