- Jun 21, 2013
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I know that its a bit early to tell, but I thought that this would make a fun experiment!
I have a mixed group with varying ages.

Here is a picture of the main bird in question, "Ducky"

A close up of her/his face. Ducky seems to be the Alpha at the moment, always the first to venture forth or investigate something new, and enjoys putting the others in their place. I have done the challenge test (waving a finger slightly in front of Ducky's beak to see a reaction), and Ducky met my finger, and only backed down when I got very close.

(I love this picture! This could be my family crest!)
Here is another from above. Note that there is no comb development to speak of, but there is an unusually large spot with no feather growth where the comb will be:

If you notice the early feathers in the saddle area, they appear pointed because of the lacing pattern, but are actually rounded:

Here is a picture of how Ducky carries his/her tail, compared to a Wheaten that I know to be female (although, not a great one, at this angle). Tail feathers have developed slowly and are held high most of the time.

What do you think?
I have a mixed group with varying ages.
Here is a picture of the main bird in question, "Ducky"
A close up of her/his face. Ducky seems to be the Alpha at the moment, always the first to venture forth or investigate something new, and enjoys putting the others in their place. I have done the challenge test (waving a finger slightly in front of Ducky's beak to see a reaction), and Ducky met my finger, and only backed down when I got very close.
(I love this picture! This could be my family crest!)
Here is another from above. Note that there is no comb development to speak of, but there is an unusually large spot with no feather growth where the comb will be:
If you notice the early feathers in the saddle area, they appear pointed because of the lacing pattern, but are actually rounded:
Here is a picture of how Ducky carries his/her tail, compared to a Wheaten that I know to be female (although, not a great one, at this angle). Tail feathers have developed slowly and are held high most of the time.
What do you think?