Frazzemrat1
Free Ranging
That is odd. How much smaller is he than the cockerel in the last pic?
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18%. He was the biggest new hatch. I picked them up on the date of hatch, and nothing out if the ordinary. As the others grew and started feathering, he was outdistanced. His body is the size of a child's nerf football, very long neck, strong stout legs. Very active.My thoughts as well. If he were just an especially large bird, sometimes they prioritize body weight over feathers, but since it's small... What protein percentage are you feeding?
He is as tall as the others, but body is much smaller, about the Suze of a child's nerf football. He also has no tail feathersThat is odd. How much smaller is he than the cockerel in the last pic?
Interesting! Him being active is a good sign! I had some Brahma cockerels feather out as slowly as him and are perfectly healthy and were fed gamebird starter so plenty of protein as well. The difference is that Brahmas are typically slow to feather while Easter Eggers are not. I hope he just has some super slow feathering genetics!18%. He was the biggest new hatch. I picked them up on the date of hatch, and nothing out if the ordinary. As the others grew and started feathering, he was outdistanced. His body is the size of a child's nerf football, very long neck, strong stout legs. Very active.
No, I'm not sure. There is no comb. The legs and feet are as large as the cockerel in the last picture. No tail feathers. An odd duck, indeed.Are we sure he is actually a cockerel?
Indeed. quack quackNo, I'm not sure. There is no comb. The legs and feet are as large as the cockerel in the last picture. No tail feathers. An odd duck, indeed.