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Well, a sweater and kelso are two different families/lines of american game birds. If you crossed a thai x asil you would have a thai x asil cross, and then to a shamo, you would have a thai x asil x shamo cross.
 
Heres a couple of this years young ones.

Greys are 5 months
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43076_bullockstag20112.jpg



Hatch are a little older almost 8 months
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Quote:
I know you asked Chief, but those type of combs come from birds who are genetically split for peacomb and straight comb. they can produce offspring (depending how they're bred) that look like them, have straight combs, or proper peacombs
 
Does any body here knows
All the combinations of combs ?
Like what I would get if I cross
A peacomb to a walnut?
Or pea comb to Cushing comb.?
 
Quote:
I know you asked Chief, but those type of combs come from birds who are genetically split for peacomb and straight comb. they can produce offspring (depending how they're bred) that look like them, have straight combs, or proper peacombs

Thanks for response Vcomb,

I have a type of come that initially appeared to be a cross between pea and single comb. Picture below.

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Difference is comb is erect. Either comb is a result of allele other than pea comb and single comb alleles or another locus is making comb stand erect. The comb type is dominant to single in red jungle fowl and my line of games but does not flop ever even when outcrossed.
 
This stag's comb was flopped over so much it was starting to interfere with his vision, finally got around to dubbing him last weekend. Have no knowledge of his ancestry.

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