Should I buy eggs or wait it out?

Last year and this year the last egg of the season was on October 23rd by the Welsummer. :lol:

It’s really nice here, so we are spending a lot of time outside. Last week I saw street basketballs at Walmart for $4. I grabbed one, and that (basketballs work better than those big rubber balls), combined with another growth spurt and practice allowed Duckling to beat me this morning. :rant I am not happy!! Proud? Of course! But it ain’t fair I tell you!
She is growing up way to quickly!
 
Last year and this year the last egg of the season was on October 23rd by the Welsummer. :lol:

It’s really nice here, so we are spending a lot of time outside. Last week I saw street basketballs at Walmart for $4. I grabbed one, and that (basketballs work better than those big rubber balls), combined with another growth spurt and practice allowed Duckling to beat me this morning. :rant I am not happy!! Proud? Of course! But it ain’t fair I tell you!
Good for her! How old is she now? And how tall?

I like Welsummers. Mine have been pretty good layers too. And oddly, both have sported a righteous set of spurs! Only downside is how noisy they are. It's easy to find them, though!
 
They are University of Arkansas blue egg layers-- a breed from a grad project there.

They are similar to whiting blues from McMurray but are a blue black splash breed.
I remember reading about those when the University shut the program down. Did you get some of the originals? Is anyone keeping the breed going other than a hatchery? Seemed like they were mostly Leghorn type with pigments! I liked my Leghorn... you know, those exotic white eggs... :D and she was more like a dog that a chicken. Attention hog!
 
I remember reading about those when the University shut the program down. Did you get some of the originals? Is anyone keeping the breed going other than a hatchery? Seemed like they were mostly Leghorn type with pigments! I liked my Leghorn... you know, those exotic white eggs... :D and she was more like a dog that a chicken. Attention hog!
The bird flu several years ago made the one breeder stop-- She worked at a poultry plant and could not risk infecting them. I can't keep roosters so can't keep them going.

As far as I know, these will be the last of them which is a shame since they lay blue eggs In amounts similar to a leghorn and are very pretty.

This is a splash pullet

Splash Blue Egg Layer 3.jpg


Splash Blue Egg Layer 1.jpg


Splash Blue Egg Layer 2.jpg
 

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