Silkie Experts needed....

Look at the feathers on the chick's head. Males tend to have feathers that stand upright and curve towards the back, while the female head feathers tend to form in a rounded feather puff.

Look at the comb when it develops within two to three weeks of the chick's birth. a male will have a larger comb than a female.

Males are significantly larger than females, and this can be obvious a few days after hatching. This isn't considered a certain method of sexing though because you may just have a large female or a small male. It's also a poor method if you are trying to compare chicks from two different genetic lines.

Listen for crowing. The chicks will start losing the fluffly baby feathers around four of five months. At that time a male silkie will start attempting to crow.

Look at the saddle feathers just before the tail and the hackle feathers on the neck. These feathers will be long and sharp on a male and gently rounded on a female.
 
Quote:
ALL silkies SHOULD have a walnut comb, but not all of them actually meet the standard. This particular cockerel has a single comb.
 
Quote:
ALL silkies SHOULD have a walnut comb, but not all of them actually meet the standard. This particular cockerel has a single comb.

I don't think this chicken is full silkie, no walnut comb for one...I guess by 26 weeks I expected more comb or an egg, what is the typical wait for an egg from a pullet?
 

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