Colie <3 :
Last night I noticed my favorite little splash sweetie has a partially fused 4th and 5th toe no nice "Y" split AND also has a double toe nail on the 4th toe. FRACK! What do I do with that?!?
That's a DQ or pretty darn close isn't it? Is that something she can pass on genetically? (the bad spacing and the double toe nail)
I wouldn't show her, but you can use her for breeding. I have eliminated all toe DQ's from my breeding pens now, but when I started I used a couple six toed or extra toed females. The nice thing with toe faults is you can look for them as soon as they hatch, and, before you get attached, sell off the culls (chicks with too few/toomany/extra toenails/poor spacing).
Much better than some DQ's, such as miscolor in black males, which can take months or even years to show up. That is SO frustrating.
Last night I noticed my favorite little splash sweetie has a partially fused 4th and 5th toe no nice "Y" split AND also has a double toe nail on the 4th toe. FRACK! What do I do with that?!?
That's a DQ or pretty darn close isn't it? Is that something she can pass on genetically? (the bad spacing and the double toe nail)
I wouldn't show her, but you can use her for breeding. I have eliminated all toe DQ's from my breeding pens now, but when I started I used a couple six toed or extra toed females. The nice thing with toe faults is you can look for them as soon as they hatch, and, before you get attached, sell off the culls (chicks with too few/toomany/extra toenails/poor spacing).
Much better than some DQ's, such as miscolor in black males, which can take months or even years to show up. That is SO frustrating.