If they crowed and had a round crest, they must have been really good quality, and if they didn't have streamers, they were very young. The hard feathers in the tail thing, that is something that shouldn't be in either sex.Interesting as, I heard a similar story but to the opposite end...
A top silkie breeder won best roo in show with a silkie of his...a couple weeks later, SHE layed an egg.
So, even the best of us can be fooled! I have had some males that had me guessing until they crowed. No streamers, no hard feathers in their tails, no combs and absolutely beautiful round crests. I was heartbroken when they crowed![]()
Tail: Male - short, very shredded at ends, well spread at base, filled underneath with an abundance of soft feathers which are overlapped by coverts and lesser sickles, the whole forming a duplex curve with back and saddle. Sickles, lesser sickles, and coverts - abundant, soft, well curved, without hard quills, concealing main tail feathers.
http://www.americansilkiebantamclub.org/standard.asp
But for the most part we are not talking about high quality show birds. How many really possess these on here anyway? Like he said, good quality boys are harder to sex. Now some boys crow early, but by six months or more (when a silkie hen is most likely to start laying) a rooster would be VERY easy to spot. Their hackles and saddle feathers would be in, as well as their streamers.
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