WOW! What an excellent first show! And super congrats to your son on his showmanship skills!![]()
Thank you!

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WOW! What an excellent first show! And super congrats to your son on his showmanship skills!![]()
Have you watched your roo doing the business? I'll tell you-- I have a cockerel that is getting closer to a year old and he still can't get on right, or really figure it out. It was never going to happen in my opinion! Besides, my girls are REALLY fluffy. After about 3 months (maybe longer?!?! I've lost count!) I gave up and did the AI and it wasn't that bad. Now I have fertile eggs that are baking away.I would have taken everyone's advice to just trim up their fluff and cut most of it off-- except that I'm showing them too. So that option (for me) was out. But if you aren't showing-- I'd just really cut away a lot of the fluff around the vent.
With everything, what makes the cull group versus what makes the keep group depends on the birds you already have, how far along you are in your breeding program and what you can afford. Ideally no one wants to keep anything except perfect birds. The reality is that there are no perfect birds. So, you keep the very best, or the ones whose traits yours lack and pass along those that will not benefit your flocks.
What is an obvious cull to one person is a keeper to another. If type is awesome, and other choices are lacking, single comb and toe issues are among the easiest to breed out (as compared with droop or split wing, wry tail, misshapen comb, etc.)
I'm at a point in my breeding where I don't want to keep or use birds with comb or toe issues except in project varieties, and even then I think long and hard about whether to keep or pass on. But a few years back I would and did. One of my best black cocks had only 4 toes on one foot, but he was awesome otherwise, great type and absolutely no leakage.
when do silkies start laying?
just poor 4th and 5th toe seperation?
What I am doing (since I've hatched a gaggle of chicks already)
First cut - within the first week
What I look for :
Comb - is it a flat comb or a single (I've never had a problem telling single combs on day old chicks)
Toes - does it have 5 toes? 4 and 6 toes are PQ....does it have a bald middle toe?(not sparse, but bald) - PQ Any extra toe nubs, lobster toe/fused toes, extra toenails?? - all go to PQ (extra toenails I might hold onto if I will be short changed for only a few chicks left with that cut)
I don't worry about poor toe seperation and placement (as long as they ARE completely separate toes and not fused) - I never worry about that until they get mature. You can show a bird without any point issues, etc with poor seperation, just as long as they aren't fused.