I was talking about breedwise.No, it doesn't work that way.
If he does not have Silkie feathers, he is not a Silkie.
The silkie feathers are caused by a recessive gene, so crossing two pure Silkies should NEVER produce a bird with normal feathers.
To get a Satin (normal feathers), someone needs to cross in a normal-feathered bird, at which point the offspring are not PURE Silkies anymore.
I think he must be.
I know the whole silkie gene thing, since I do breed silkies, & Satins are just another variety of the breed, but without the Silkie Feather gene h/h.
Of course silkie mixes will also result in solid feathers.
To create a Satin, breed Silkie to another breed, such a Polish, or Cochin(For Example) Take offspring Breed together. Half will be Silkied, & half will be smooth. Take only the smooth feathered, black skinned, crested, & five toed offspring produced, & breed those together. These would be Generation 2 of making Satins.
Same process of creating different colored, or larger sized silkies, but reversed.
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