Sexing partridge pattern chicks

7 week photos

Look at them, so different!
AC5F4410-4BAE-4C1E-82C4-3D4AD38D759F.jpeg


These two look more similar, but their sizes are still so different. The larger one hatched first (though is older only by less than a day) and the smaller one was an assisted hatch, maybe that's why.
D6EEACFD-5F9E-40FA-A6A1-D8C9DB4A4D07.jpeg



Pooh:
9D0217FD-339C-4714-97E5-F389B224961E.jpeg


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The Baby (look at those blue feet!):
8FE847E8-85A1-4568-ABE6-E4E9095CD729.jpeg


F651B91B-EC0D-4B90-BD01-5C3B653A64EC.jpeg



The Pretty One:
3052C4E1-E1E7-4A6A-889F-4E27D71E90CA.jpeg


7F6E8552-EB52-4262-AD87-61E37BC18E98.jpeg
 
7 week photos

Look at them, so different!
AC5F4410-4BAE-4C1E-82C4-3D4AD38D759F.jpeg


These two look more similar, but their sizes are still so different. The larger one hatched first (though is older only by less than a day) and the smaller one was an assisted hatch, maybe that's why.
D6EEACFD-5F9E-40FA-A6A1-D8C9DB4A4D07.jpeg



Pooh:
9D0217FD-339C-4714-97E5-F389B224961E.jpeg


448D4341-A0A2-4B5B-86E4-1E724FC51963.jpeg



The Baby (look at those blue feet!):
8FE847E8-85A1-4568-ABE6-E4E9095CD729.jpeg


F651B91B-EC0D-4B90-BD01-5C3B653A64EC.jpeg



The Pretty One:
3052C4E1-E1E7-4A6A-889F-4E27D71E90CA.jpeg


7F6E8552-EB52-4262-AD87-61E37BC18E98.jpeg
I personally like how the pretty one looks! Almost like black with gold lacing ♥️
 
I personally like how the pretty one looks! Almost like black with gold lacing ♥️
I like her, too! If I think of her independent of the breed and stop trying to compare her to the others, she is pretty on her own as well. If she ends up mostly black but with gold lacing along the body and wings, she will go well with my DSL Barnevelders, who are black with white lacing on the body and wings :love
 
I like her, too! If I think of her independent of the breed and stop trying to compare her to the others, she is pretty on her own as well. If she ends up mostly black but with gold lacing along the body and wings, she will go well with my DSL Barnevelders, who are black with white lacing on the body and wings :love
I can't wait to see!
 
The takeaway from this experiment so far is that, unless you have purebred chickens from a stable line that produces consistent results, using wing patterns or the amount/location of the black is completely unreliable. Both my cockerel from last year, and my chicks from this year, have developed in a way inconsistent with the breed standard (especially how much black they have and where it is). And they have been inconsistent between each other, too - for example, the chicks that had a LOT of solid black on the wings early on, haven't consistently gone one way or the other. I had solid black wings end up male (Blinky) AND female (The Baby), and nice patterned wings end up male (Lemonade) and female (Pooh). So maybe this whole thread is pointless :(

I will keep updating the thread with pictures for anybody with chicks from Papa's Poultry, or another source where the breed is still under development, if they are interested in following how this pattern develops as the chicks grow.

I will say that there is one thing I've found stands out when trying to sex these chicks, and it was pretty consistent and apparent as early as 4 weeks, when the feathers on their bodies started to come in (as opposed to the wings - forget the wings). The females' feathers had a more broken up pattern to them, like dots or spots or lines across the feather, and the males' feathers had a solid color in the middle and looked like they were outlined with the second color along the edge.

Example - here are the two males. Note the feathers on their shoulders and backs, and the tops of the wings (this was at 4 weeks):
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Note the higher amount of detail on the females, even if there's no clear lacing yet:
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Even the one that stands out with the black, still has finer detail on the pattern, where it looks more broken up:
C8CDA838-88B8-4267-A623-F165F4013114.jpeg



Here's a male and a female side by side. Note the wide areas of black on each feather on the male, outlined with orange along the periphery, vs. the high density patterning on the female:
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This was apparent as soon as their shoulder and back feathers started coming in. So, I'd say, forget about the wings, and look at the shoulder and back feathers. A lot of people use the breast but the breast comes in later, and by then you have the shoulder and back feathers to look at. But before any of that happened, even the shoulder/back feathers, the combs on the boys started getting quite big and read (Blinky only had wings by the time his comb turned red!) so maybe the good ol' comb is still the best method :lol: It is interesting to look back on the old pictures though, now that I know who's who, and see my theory validated. So that's my lesson. Forget the wings, and look at how the body feathers differ - large areas of color in the males, vs. a high density broken up look for the females.
 
Basically fits with your experience that males only ever have single lacing whereas females have double. And bald shoulders is a boy thing.
I don't think you posted it, but I've seen it before - ran across it last year when I was trying to sex my Barnevelders. I found it confusing, too. Especially in my case, because my Barnevelders are silver, not standard (red), so they looked very different from all the pictures in that article, and I couldn't use some of the pointers. For example, none of them had eyeliner, and they looked completely identical from the back at hatch (same kind of stripes down the back). They were also harder to sex than these Orpingtons are now, even though the Barnevelders came from a purer line and developed consistently. It's just that their first set of feathers all had the same pattern - both males and females - and none were truly laced, it was just an even broken up pattern on both. It wasn't until much later that they started diverging visually. With the Orpingtons and the partridge pattern, the very first feathers that came in on their shoulders and backs already looked different. So they never went through a stage where they looked the same. They only looked similar and confusing before they had all their feathers - when they were fuzz balls with wings :lol:
 
so the sexing rules are...

there are no rules!
Haha. The best rule: be patient and wait for the combs :lol: I just wanted to track the feather pattern development for the fun of it. On both the Orpingtons and the Barnevelders, the combs were more convincing at an earlier age than were the feathers.
 

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