Snackmeat's Nut Mix Picture Journal

SnackMeat

Songster
Jun 14, 2025
349
413
141
I see a lot of pictures journals and so instead of posting a "look at this pretty pattern!" I figured I would start one.

We are lucky because we are largely in this for meat chickens, but wanted to experience chicken meat that would be more likely to be found in other countries, or, less likely to be Cornish cross types. Though we did get some Cornish crosses given to us by someone who didn't know what they were and when they found out were horrified. I'm guessing they wanted egg chickens :)

Luckily, I'm in an area where there's a fair amount of backyard and rural chicken keepers so while some of ours will definitely become food, there's definitely interest in some of them when some turn out to be roosters. It's been cool getting to know locals and seeing what they really like about their flocks and what they gravitate towards.

We have a collection of chicks, all 10 weeks or younger (yes we are preparing for all the roosters. We had some early crowers around 6 weeks. Luckily the flock-master the eggs came from was very, very desirous of having them because he loves splash patterns (or simply got sick of all the mostly-black chicks they'd hatched out from this season's black brahmas. Seems they out performed the Easter Egger rooster, but the two early crowers were from the EE rooster.)

We have an errant Cornish cross hen, a wayward Brahma rooster that was supposed to be dinner but he's so chill that except for having to readjust his crow collar he's largely become part of the background (he's crap at looking for predators though. He's rather take an afternoon nap with the babies under the jeep,) some silkies, EE or Brahma crosses, Anconas, black-crested blue polish, Barred Hollands, American Bresse, Mottled Java, Gold Spangled Hamburg, a mix of half blue-laced Red wyandottes (a bunch of different hens but only one rooster,) and if this next batch goes well, Muscovy ducks, a lone Pekin duck, and a bunch of supposedly show quality silkies (some containing the frizzle gene, which one of the locals is looking for) because the price for eggs was 75% off since it was too hot to ship eggs.


All that being said, I wanted to show how pretty this half blue-laced Red Wyandotte's feathers are coming in. There is a second, very similar looking one and they both came from the darkest eggs. So it's possible the hen was copper black Marans (which the local had in her flock) but it's weird this is how the mix would show. So maybe that was the hen type, maybe not.
 

Attachments

  • Screenshot_2025-07-08-23-17-43-36_92460851df6f172a4592fca41cc2d2e6.jpg
    Screenshot_2025-07-08-23-17-43-36_92460851df6f172a4592fca41cc2d2e6.jpg
    177.5 KB · Views: 27
  • Screenshot_2025-07-08-23-16-28-45_92460851df6f172a4592fca41cc2d2e6.jpg
    Screenshot_2025-07-08-23-16-28-45_92460851df6f172a4592fca41cc2d2e6.jpg
    237.4 KB · Views: 7
  • Screenshot_2025-07-08-23-16-40-57_92460851df6f172a4592fca41cc2d2e6.jpg
    Screenshot_2025-07-08-23-16-40-57_92460851df6f172a4592fca41cc2d2e6.jpg
    154.2 KB · Views: 8
  • Screenshot_2025-07-08-23-16-15-20_92460851df6f172a4592fca41cc2d2e6.jpg
    Screenshot_2025-07-08-23-16-15-20_92460851df6f172a4592fca41cc2d2e6.jpg
    210.9 KB · Views: 7
  • Screenshot_2025-07-08-23-16-03-98_92460851df6f172a4592fca41cc2d2e6.jpg
    Screenshot_2025-07-08-23-16-03-98_92460851df6f172a4592fca41cc2d2e6.jpg
    195.9 KB · Views: 7
  • IMG20250708175859.jpg
    IMG20250708175859.jpg
    772.8 KB · Views: 10
  • IMG20250708175908.jpg
    IMG20250708175908.jpg
    865.7 KB · Views: 10
  • IMG_20250708_232003.jpg
    IMG_20250708_232003.jpg
    1.3 MB · Views: 11
Our newest chick hatched all by their lonesome. This was one of four Indio Gigante eggs bought from a seller who supposedly has RRA stock, so while I would have been fine with Green fire stock, RRA is especially exciting. Sadly, only one of four hatched, and there was a couple reasons for that. Seller already went above and beyond fixing it for me even though I was just asking for replacement eggs (one had pre-started and died, one was infertile which is just to be expected, and all four had really porous shells which was either summertime stress, or a new food they had started.)

I already expected the third egg wouldn't hatch because candling, it was half the size or less as this one (even with excess eggs fluid around so it wasn't shrunken by the air sac.) But I still wish I had intervened a little bit more. I was hoping it just needed more time to develop.

In any event, one baby Indio G to join some older Indio Gigante bebes.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_20250803_143516.jpg
    IMG_20250803_143516.jpg
    448.9 KB · Views: 0
  • IMG_20250803_143457.jpg
    IMG_20250803_143457.jpg
    361 KB · Views: 1
Wings the tomato glutton silkie got traded off with a number of our less favorite birds. Wings was a favorite but it was going to some people who manage a school flock during the summer, who refresh (likely) hens for the kids to interact with once the school year starts. So I thought Wings would be a really great ambassador, who was fine around all my regular sized birds. I do miss seeing her big floofy butt meandering around and completely ignoring all non-food attempts at socializing with her though. Her disdain was as palpable as it was strangely endearing.
 

Attachments

  • Screenshot_2025-08-03-14-41-43-29_92460851df6f172a4592fca41cc2d2e6.jpg
    Screenshot_2025-08-03-14-41-43-29_92460851df6f172a4592fca41cc2d2e6.jpg
    294.8 KB · Views: 1

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom