Sexlink Thread- Pictures and Discussion

Status
Not open for further replies.
Quote:
She's a Dominique/RIR cross. I think I'll name her Buttercup! Put butter in it - that's funny!!!

It's a bad rose comb, this is common in straight/rose combos, that's what someone said in another post.

Not like that handsome rose comb roo from a few pages back - he is gorgeous!!

you're almost to 500 posts! make it here!

Hey that's funny - I didn't even notice - whoohoo!!!
 
I just found this tread and love it but I have a question. I bought 4 cinnamon queesns and I know thats a slw mixed with nh but I can't find much about how often they will go broody. I have 1 that lays every day still but in the evening instead of going on the roost she goes in a nest box on the golf ball and I have to push her out and make her go on the roost. Is this how they start to go broody or is she just thinking the nest is warmer? She one of the top 4 in pecking order, I also have 6 EEs, with 18 feet of roost for them, in a 8 X 8 coop. She doesn't try to peck me when I push her out but makes growling sounds. During the day shes out in the run and only goes to nest to lay.
68222_chicken_coop_018.jpg
 
Quote:
Actually, a SLW sex-link would have a black tail. Yours are probably a RIR or NH x Rhode Island White.
wink.png
There's no way to know for sure, because hatcheries keep their sex-link recipes secret...

My neighbor had 18 Cinnamon Queen hens, and three went broody. One of them refused to quit being broody and actually starved herself to death.
sad.png
The other two gave a good attempt, and then quit within a couple months. The other 15 hens never went broody. With commercial sex-links, the hatcheries try to breed out broodiness because they're after eggs. And of course when a hen goes broody she quits laying...

I have noticed a couple of mine wanting to sleep in the nest boxes too, without showing any broody characteristics. I think they just like to go in there all by themselves to get all cozy and for some alone time, LOL. I always pull them out and put them on the roosts because I don't want a pile of poop in the nests. I do think it's too late in the year for broodies...
 
Thanks, I wasn't sure, I do have to say they are great layers I have had them for 2 months and all 4 have layed everyday. It was been to -13 a couple nights and I still get 4 brown eggs every day. They are very curious about everything. If they are in the run they have to come in the coop if I am in there to see what I am doing. But they definently have their pecking order. the EEs are all under them.
 
Quote:
Actually, a SLW sex-link would have a black tail. Yours are probably a RIR or NH x Rhode Island White.
wink.png
There's no way to know for sure, because hatcheries keep their sex-link recipes secret...

My neighbor had 18 Cinnamon Queen hens, and three went broody. One of them refused to quit being broody and actually starved herself to death.
sad.png
The other two gave a good attempt, and then quit within a couple months. The other 15 hens never went broody. With commercial sex-links, the hatcheries try to breed out broodiness because they're after eggs. And of course when a hen goes broody she quits laying...

I have noticed a couple of mine wanting to sleep in the nest boxes too, without showing any broody characteristics. I think they just like to go in there all by themselves to get all cozy and for some alone time, LOL. I always pull them out and put them on the roosts because I don't want a pile of poop in the nests. I do think it's too late in the year for broodies...

BUT This is the first one I have ever seen that actually has a ROSE comb, at least it appears to from what I can see from the pic.

Where did you get her from grandmas Nest ? Was she bought from a hatchery or feedstore ? Or is she a farm bred sexlink ? So being that she has a rose comb, I guess she could be from a SLW hen as long as the roo was some strain or mix that was White Tailed Red Columbian like this hen. This is interesting and I really like the looks of a rose comb on a sexlink bird like this. I think I'm gonna work on a complicated strain of Rosecombed Sexlinks, I've already been thinking about it but that pic make up my mind.

Please let us know where you got her from if you know her original origin.

As for the broodiness. Like Cowgirl said, Commercial strains have had the broodiness bred out but there are always exceptions and especially if she was farm bred then then that would give her a higher likelihood of being broody. But if shes out during the day, its hard to say. Some birds are stubborn prefer to roost in the nests. Are the roosts higher that the nest box ? They generally like to roost in the highest place possible so the roosts should be higher than the nest box.
 
Quote:
Actually, a SLW sex-link would have a black tail. Yours are probably a RIR or NH x Rhode Island White.
wink.png
There's no way to know for sure, because hatcheries keep their sex-link recipes secret...

My neighbor had 18 Cinnamon Queen hens, and three went broody. One of them refused to quit being broody and actually starved herself to death.
sad.png
The other two gave a good attempt, and then quit within a couple months. The other 15 hens never went broody. With commercial sex-links, the hatcheries try to breed out broodiness because they're after eggs. And of course when a hen goes broody she quits laying...

I have noticed a couple of mine wanting to sleep in the nest boxes too, without showing any broody characteristics. I think they just like to go in there all by themselves to get all cozy and for some alone time, LOL. I always pull them out and put them on the roosts because I don't want a pile of poop in the nests. I do think it's too late in the year for broodies...

and a SLW sexlink would have a rose comb. sorry i did'nt notice that was a rose comb:)
 
Last edited:
Quote:
Actually, a SLW sex-link would have a black tail. Yours are probably a RIR or NH x Rhode Island White.
wink.png
There's no way to know for sure, because hatcheries keep their sex-link recipes secret...

My neighbor had 18 Cinnamon Queen hens, and three went broody. One of them refused to quit being broody and actually starved herself to death.
sad.png
The other two gave a good attempt, and then quit within a couple months. The other 15 hens never went broody. With commercial sex-links, the hatcheries try to breed out broodiness because they're after eggs. And of course when a hen goes broody she quits laying...

I have noticed a couple of mine wanting to sleep in the nest boxes too, without showing any broody characteristics. I think they just like to go in there all by themselves to get all cozy and for some alone time, LOL. I always pull them out and put them on the roosts because I don't want a pile of poop in the nests. I do think it's too late in the year for broodies...

i agree, it could definetly be NH crossed with a rose combed RIW
 
Quote:
Actually, a SLW sex-link would have a black tail. Yours are probably a RIR or NH x Rhode Island White.
wink.png
There's no way to know for sure, because hatcheries keep their sex-link recipes secret...

My neighbor had 18 Cinnamon Queen hens, and three went broody. One of them refused to quit being broody and actually starved herself to death.
sad.png
The other two gave a good attempt, and then quit within a couple months. The other 15 hens never went broody. With commercial sex-links, the hatcheries try to breed out broodiness because they're after eggs. And of course when a hen goes broody she quits laying...

I have noticed a couple of mine wanting to sleep in the nest boxes too, without showing any broody characteristics. I think they just like to go in there all by themselves to get all cozy and for some alone time, LOL. I always pull them out and put them on the roosts because I don't want a pile of poop in the nests. I do think it's too late in the year for broodies...

i agree, it could definetly be NH crossed with a rose combed RIW

I didnt even think about an RC RIW but that is a possibility too.
 
I got them from our local feed store I do not know where they get them from. That really wasn't a good picture of her comb. They are single combs. But not really big. They are about 3/4 of an inch high off the head. Heres a close up of the waddles on another one. Yes my roost are 30 iches off the floor and my nest boxes are about 4 inch above the floor.
68222_pb150019.jpg
 
Last edited:
Status
Not open for further replies.

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom