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Unfortunately, unless you have an auto-sexing breed, the only truly reliable way to tell the gender is to wait and see. Even professionals get it wrong, sometimes ... which is why so many of us end up with surprise cockerels in pullet orders!Ya’ll are telling me there’s almost no reliable ways to tell the gender![]()
The most reliable way to tell is to see it mount another chicken (could be either gender on the bottom, tbh - I've seen both). Nobody really sticks by a chicken to see if an eggs falls out though that's another way.![]()
I truly, TRULY wish my young roos were polite enough to not do this a few feet in front of me (or just outside my sliding glass door in the morning). I'm not that fortunate. And if I were ever to be struck blind? No worries - they aren't quiet about it, either. :-/
You're right I don't usually stick by a chicken to see if an egg falls out but I don't stick by them to see who mounts who either.
Especially dominant females will mount others too, although admittedly it's not terribly common in pullets that ageI have egg-laying hens with combs and wattles that rival some roos. The most reliable way to tell is to see it mount another chicken (could be either gender on the bottom, tbh - I've seen both). Nobody really sticks by a chicken to see if an eggs falls out though that's another way.![]()
Just be grateful they're not courting you feet. Now THAT was weird!I truly, TRULY wish my young roos were polite enough to not do this a few feet in front of me (or just outside my sliding glass door in the morning). I'm not that fortunate. And if I were ever to be struck blind? No worries - they aren't quiet about it, either. :-/