NoI have Plymouth male and black alustlorp hen. Would that make a black sex link?
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NoI have Plymouth male and black alustlorp hen. Would that make a black sex link?
Dang they look just like the images shown.... Plus would explain with this one chick is completely black. -_-
Dang they look just like the images shown.... Plus would explain with this one chick is completely black. -_-
I got two with a white dot on there heads and one straight black.Need more details but my first thought is they the barred rooster is not pure for barring, probably a cross with something else.
Go to the first post of this thread and then look at the chart for black sexlink. You have it backwards for the cock and hen for a sexlinkDang they look just like the images shown.... Plus would explain with this one chick is completely black. -_-
I was just asking I wasn't trying to make a black sex link. I'm just curious why this chick is solid black.Go to the first post of this thread and then look at the chart for black sexlink. You have it backwards for the cock and hen for a sexlink
Ridgerunner had the answer to that--the barred rooster was single for barring.I was just asking I wasn't trying to make a black sex link. I'm just curious why this chick is solid black.
Hello.I have Plymouth male and black alustlorp hen. Would that make a black sex link?
Yes. and if the male is a solid color that isn't dominant white (like a leghorn).Hello.
You can create a black sex-linked chicken only when the female carries the barring.
Yes! The person posting the question wondered how he got a solid black chick from the backwards pairing. Likely more appropriate for a genetics forumHello.
You can create a black sex-linked chicken only when the female carries the barring.