You're right, they look nothing like the pics I see of Buttercup chicks.Sorry, I totally forgot! Here's the pictures.
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Possibly production reds or the like. Definitely cute babies.

Pic # 2, I'm not seeing tail feathers or is it an optical illusion? No tail compared to siblings is ALWAYS boy in my experience.
In my stag pen, I have a year old boy, grow outs about 4 months old (1 set of 6 NN Turken plus 2 separate individual from unrelated batches), grow out 4 Silkie boys about 3 months old, And my main guy will call chicks to the treats he finds and they go under the fence to enjoy them. Teen boys are NOT roosters, they are raging hormonal idiots, and act as such.
People say don't name your boys if you're going to process them or don't get attached. For me, some get names and some become more endearing than others. At the end of the day, when we need to process... we understand that it is the circle of life and for us to eat SOMETHING must die (even if it was only a head of lettuce). Any who we are very attached to, will be sent to someone else for processing and to feed their family. That goes for old hens as well. My daughter and I are somehow uncomfortable about eating hens that have been with us a while. But no reason they can't be made use of before their body shuts down and becomes ashes to ashes and dust to dust... everything come from the earth and returns to it in one form or another. I'm not saying what's right for me is right for you... just sharing that it is OK to care for an animal and still let it be part of the food chain. Or trying to encourage you or possibly help make your decision a little easier come that time.
Thanks for sharing!


My poor pullets run from them, and I "beat" them off with sticks, rakes, etc. (I just put it in front of their chest so they can't pass and gently push and they jump away like it's an electric fence
) but they still come at me, biting my boots. 


