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You mean Silkies Silkies? Or that they have smooth feathering? There are a lot of splits that produce the Silkied feathers in Ameraucanas, but if you mean Silkies, They are not bred to Silkies. Sorry if I'm not understanding, but looks like you are asking when they don't look like the Silkie breed when they are Silkied Ameraucanas.Why don't they look like Silkies?
Yes. I thought that they should look like Silkies if they are called Silkie Ameraucanas and why do they have smooth feathers?You mean Silkies Silkies? Or that they have smooth feathering? There are a lot of splits that produce the Silkied feathers in Ameraucanas, but if you mean Silkies, They are not bred to Silkies. Sorry if I'm not understanding, but looks like you are asking why they don't look like the Silkie breed when they are Silkied Ameraucanas.
Why do they have normal feathering?Yes. I thought that they should look like Silkies if they are called Silkie Ameraucanas and why do they have smooth feathers?
I just have one silkied cochin at this point. Yes, I believe you've answered my question -- that a split for silkied will pass that split on in a small percentage, so within that generation (a regular feathered group off by themselves, some of which are split) there could possibly be silkied offspring from that group. Please correct me if I don't have it right. THANKS!