LynnaePB
Free Ranging
I've been preparing for breeding, hoping to start in Febuary. Really hoping this roo will keep the hens fertile, but he has never been around girls before so I'm sort of worried. But his hormones do seem to be kicking in, he is not so chill with me handling him now.
How do you keep your silkie hens from going broody? This coming year I'll have only four hens (lost one, that made my plans harder) but I'll raise a bunch for 2022. They apparently all have mothering abilities, some stronger than others. Like seriously, two out of three of my silkies went broody for just a couple days this week. Just when the egg laying was starting to pick up![]()
I haven't really tried very hard to stop my girls from going broody. I have over 15 pullets/hens in with a single cockerel though so I don't worry too much about the ratio getting thrown off when they go broody. I'd definitely think about trying the broody cage method if I had less hens and too many were going broody at once though.
Hopefully your boy will learn quickly and you'll have fertile eggs soon! A lot of my males that are separated from the females when young get the hang of breeding in the first month or two of being integrated in with girls. Sometimes they are really bad at it and it takes longer but so far they've always eventually figured it out.

Hello lovely silkie folks!
Genetics question again!
My little hybrids are still hatching. 10th one today. Last night (#9) needed a little help getting out of the egg, as she has this huge vaulted skull! She is doing fine now. She is the only one that has a vaulted skull out of the 10 that have hatched so far. I did not expect any of the chicks to have a vaulted skull. Father (silkie) does not really have a significant one and mother is not even a vaulted skull breed (ameraucana/BCM).
Does anyone know the genetics behind the vaulted skull? I could not find any info in the threads. This chick almost looks polish!
All 10 of these chicks look different from each other, some differences are subtle, some are major. They all have black eyes, beaks and feathered dark legs.
8 are black, 2 are blue. So far planning to keep one of the blues.View attachment 2451198View attachment 2451199
That is interesting you got a little one with a vault! I don't think I got any vaulted back when I had some cochin silkie mixes. I can't quite remember if the silkie mothers had vaults but I think they did.
I wish I knew more about the genetics involved in vaults. I'd personally like to try to breed away from them more and having a better understanding of the genetics would be helpful. I definitely notice vaults much more often in females in my silkie chicks than in males. I've seen some breeders mentioning noticing the same thing especially back when vaults weren't so common (so mostly in really old threads here).

I've only ever bred non vaulted males to my females which are mostly vaulted. I'd say sexing using just the vault seems to be around at least 70-80% accurate or so from what I've seen with most of my pairings so far. Maybe it's just coincidence but it is something I hope to track more thoroughly in the future.
