Mallard-colored ducks have head stripes and are white under their wings. Mallard-colored drakes have a reddish chest.
Celery has a Mallard-colored mom - Cinnamon. Cinnamon has head stripes and is white under her wings. She does not have a reddish chest because she is not a drake.
Dusky-colored ducks do not have head stripes, they are colored under their wings, and if they are drakes they do NOT have a reddish chest.
Asparagus (on the far left) is a Dusky-colored drake. He never had head stripes, is colored under his wings, and does not have a reddish chest.
When a Mallard-colored duck is bred to a Dusky-colored duck, the Mallard color is dominant and the baby becomes a Mallard-colored duck or drake.
I understand! Last year Cinnamon was bred to Dusky-colored Filbert. Her son, Apple (middle left in the above photo) is Mallard-colored. He was born with head stripes, is white under his wings, and has the Mallard-colored reddish chest.
Then Mallard-colored Cinnamon made a baby with Dusky-colored Asparagus. The baby is Celery, the genetic mystery duck.
Celery was born with head stripes. He still has head stripes (?!).
Celery is white under his wings like his mom.
Celery is a drake. He does not quack loudly and just got his curly male feathers a couple of weeks ago! So when his juvenile feathers finish dropping out he will have a Mallard-colored reddish...
WAIT!!! His juvenile feathers are dropping out!!! Look! The reddish spots in the picture are the brown juvenile feathers which are dropping out faster each day. Under those brown spots is his new chest color - beautiful and shiny and ...PERFECTLY GRAY!!! Just below his beautiful Mallard-colored striped face, and next to his Mallard-colored white underwings...no trace of a Mallard-colored reddish chest. Only a Dusky-colored chest.
Mallard-colored ducks have head stripes and are white under their wings. Mallard-colored drakes have a reddish chest.
Celery has a Mallard-colored mom - Cinnamon. Cinnamon has head stripes and is white under her wings. She does not have a reddish chest because she is not a drake.
Dusky-colored ducks do not have head stripes, they are colored under their wings, and if they are drakes they do NOT have a reddish chest.
Asparagus (on the far left) is a Dusky-colored drake. He never had head stripes, is colored under his wings, and does not have a reddish chest.
When a Mallard-colored duck is bred to a Dusky-colored duck, the Mallard color is dominant and the baby becomes a Mallard-colored duck or drake.
I understand! Last year Cinnamon was bred to Dusky-colored Filbert. Her son, Apple (middle left in the above photo) is Mallard-colored. He was born with head stripes, is white under his wings, and has the Mallard-colored reddish chest.
Then Mallard-colored Cinnamon made a baby with Dusky-colored Asparagus. The baby is Celery, the genetic mystery duck.
Celery was born with head stripes. He still has head stripes (?!).
Celery is white under his wings like his mom.
Celery is a drake. He does not quack loudly and just got his curly male feathers a couple of weeks ago! So when his juvenile feathers finish dropping out he will have a Mallard-colored reddish...
WAIT!!! His juvenile feathers are dropping out!!! Look! The reddish spots in the picture are the brown juvenile feathers which are dropping out faster each day. Under those brown spots is his new chest color - beautiful and shiny and ...PERFECTLY GRAY!!! Just below his beautiful Mallard-colored striped face, and next to his Mallard-colored white underwings...no trace of a Mallard-colored reddish chest. Only a Dusky-colored chest.
THE STORY OF CELERY - THE GENETIC MYSTERY DUCK Mallard-colored ducks have head stripes and are white under their wings. Mallard-colored drakes have a reddish chest. Celery has a Mallard-colored mom - Cinnamon. Cinnamon has head stripes and is white under her wings. She does not have a reddish chest because she is not a drake. Dusky-colored ducks do not have head stripes, they are colored under their wings, and if they are drakes they do NOT have a reddish chest. Asparagus (on the far left) is a Dusky-colored drake. He never had head stripes, is colored under his wings, and does not have a reddish chest. [COLOR=B42000][/COLOR] When a Mallard-colored duck is bred to a Dusky-colored duck, the Mallard color is dominant and the baby becomes a Mallard-colored duck or drake. I understand! Last year Cinnamon was bred to Dusky-colored Filbert. Her son, Apple (middle left in the above photo) is Mallard-colored. He was born with head stripes, is white under his wings, and has the Mallard-colored reddish chest. Then Mallard-colored Cinnamon made a baby with Dusky-colored Asparagus. The baby is Celery, the genetic mystery duck. Celery was born with head stripes. He still has head stripes (?!). Celery is white under his wings like his mom. Celery is a drake. He does not quack loudly and just got his curly male feathers a couple of weeks ago! So when his juvenile feathers finish dropping out he will have a Mallard-colored reddish... WAIT!!! His juvenile feathers are dropping out!!! Look! The reddish spots in the picture are the brown juvenile feathers which are dropping out faster each day. Under those brown spots is his new chest color - beautiful and shiny and ...PERFECTLY GRAY!!! Just below his beautiful Mallard-colored striped face, and next to his Mallard-colored white underwings...no trace of a Mallard-colored reddish chest. Only a Dusky-colored chest. [COLOR=B42000][/COLOR] AHHHHHHHH!I DON'T UNDERSTAND GENETICS!!!But I do love Celery and his mysterious color!
Not exactly sure on age but about 8 weeks. They only lack their full wing feathers and few around their head. They're quacking and few peeping or very low quacks. If I had to guess at this point I have 3 of each sex. Looks like I'll be ordering some more girls...Lol. And as far as Dawn goes I've settled on Mallard not Rouen way to small. I think my runners are even bigger Dawn.
HI, just curious. What breed is your brown with white flight wings? I have one (3 weeks old) which is a runner / welsh harlequin cross that looks just like it