Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I had some sort of mutation pop up in a cockerel last year. He's just over 4 pounds. I'm currently running an experiment with him over a few hens. I want to know if he passes the size along. One of his chicks from my new years hatch has been noticeably larger than the others since it was a week old.
I remember the photo of your big guy. Have you a photo of his large offspring chick next to its hatchmates?
Quote:
These are weird in how they develop. If they are this color, they stay mostly the same until between 3-4 months. I can usually only tell for sure when the boys start getting the red on the wing bows. That will start to come in before the combs get bigger. As I said, this line cross has weird stuff happen.
These are weird in how they develop. If they are this color, they stay mostly the same until between 3-4 months. I can usually only tell for sure when the boys start getting the red on the wing bows. That will start to come in before the combs get bigger. As I said, this line cross has weird stuff happen.
That IS a sizeable difference! How lucky you have these genetics going through your stock! Odd that there wasn't more than one significantly larger chick from the breeding pair? Another interesting experiment is to see if the large chick turns out a boy or if females come out of the genetics too? What size were the eggs that hatched -- did some happen to be larger than others too? I notice one of my Silkies can lay various sizes of eggs while the other is always a consistent egg size. Must be somewhere in your line of Silkies a large fowl was cross-bred to them generations ago and larger Silkies are just now starting to show up without losing the perfect Silkie standard. This isn't the breeding pair that had fused fifth toes, are they?