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UPDATE: The chicks are now 3 weeks old. One is significantly more feathered than the others, and I'm guessing it's a female - because of the early feathering, and because her feathers are coming in uniformly patterned throughout.
Here's all of them together:
Here's Pooh, the one I think is female:
Here's Lemonade. He's looking very male to me, mostly because of the comb, the thick legs, and he’s very dense and heavy compared to the other chicks. I had a cannon ball like that last year, he ended up male and got huge:
Blinky has gotten a lot more patterning on his wings (used to have the least) but has the biggest comb and wattles with the most color on them, so he’s probably a lost cause. Definitely has the most masculine head of all of them:
The Pretty One has a smaller comb than Lemonade or Blinky so there’s still hope, but the feather pattern is throwing me off. Still a lot of black, though that doesn’t seem to be such a strong indicator with the chicks being so mixed already, so who knows:
The Baby also has a small comb, but is the smallest chick overall so maybe it just hasn’t developed yet. It, too, has more patterning on its wings now, and I just noticed that its legs are a different color than the other chicks’ - not quite as dark as slate, but something between pink and slate.
Here are some closer-up head shots to show the combs:
Pooh:
Lemonade:
Blinky:
The Pretty One:
The Baby:
Any guesses?
Here's all of them together:
Here's Pooh, the one I think is female:
Here's Lemonade. He's looking very male to me, mostly because of the comb, the thick legs, and he’s very dense and heavy compared to the other chicks. I had a cannon ball like that last year, he ended up male and got huge:
Blinky has gotten a lot more patterning on his wings (used to have the least) but has the biggest comb and wattles with the most color on them, so he’s probably a lost cause. Definitely has the most masculine head of all of them:
The Pretty One has a smaller comb than Lemonade or Blinky so there’s still hope, but the feather pattern is throwing me off. Still a lot of black, though that doesn’t seem to be such a strong indicator with the chicks being so mixed already, so who knows:
The Baby also has a small comb, but is the smallest chick overall so maybe it just hasn’t developed yet. It, too, has more patterning on its wings now, and I just noticed that its legs are a different color than the other chicks’ - not quite as dark as slate, but something between pink and slate.
Here are some closer-up head shots to show the combs:
Pooh:
Lemonade:
Blinky:
The Pretty One:
The Baby:
Any guesses?

All of my Orpingtons are English. I have three colors - Silver Laced, Lemon Cuckoo and Red Partridge. I fell in love with the partridges the moment I saw them! I have been salivating over Essex Orpingtons pictures online! I so wish I could find those fancy colors in the US as well. But I'll be happy if I can finally get some Red Partridge hens. My batch from last year produced only one partridge chick out of 6 eggs (the other colors had a much higher hatch rate than that). He was glorious and the best chicken ever in terms of temperament, but he, too, died young, at only 7 months old. Dropped dead like yours, and he was otherwise healthy
So I'm trying this again this year, ordered hatching eggs from the same breeder. He specializes in English Orpingtons. I got 5 chicks this time, and I'm REALLY hoping for two females. It's hard to find English Orpingtons so I had to have the eggs shipped, and they travelled coast to coast from California to Massachusetts, and are hard to hatch... But I really really want those big, fluffy partridge beauties!