We r so happy we now have 4 sfh laying eggs 3 to go yipee
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We r so happy we now have 4 sfh laying eggs 3 to go yipee
well, the first two (yellow and grey) look possibly crested to me, but IMO grey may be the only pullet. hope i'm wrong.I put this out for some other folks but I'm thinking those of you w/experience w/SFH may have an opinion...
I'm posting to get the opinions of those of you that are good at figuring out sexes. They may be too young at 4 weeks (?)
These are my 4 Swedish Flower Hen chicks that are with the RIR broody. They are 4 weeks old this weekend. Any guesses as to sex? I apologize that some of the photos aren't the best. Trying to get these photos was like trying to herd cats. Little Black is especially hard to photograph.
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Strange you should ask about little black. He/she is the smallest and may have hatched a day our 2 later than the others. But...looks way behind in development compared to the others. No real tail feathers and mostly still fluff rather than feathers in general.
I hatched yellow here - from Bhep; the other 3 I got from a gal within driving distance that had eggs from KYTin... and Bhep. However...they also had other breeds at the same time and I wondered if one of them got mixed in by mistake since there is such a difference!
When I'm able to find them homes I do. I have given them to locals with the stipulation that I get to borrow them (should something happen to my boys). So far I've placed more than half of the roos. Sadly, the others are eaten.Here's another question I'm interested to hear from you SFH folks.
If you have multiple roosters and you are only going to keep 1:
What do each of you do with your excess roosters?
I know what I'd do with them if they were other more common breeds, but when they are a more, - "rare" - breed like the SFH, do you handle that differently? I'm just curious to hear your practice - not saying any one way is right, just want to hear from all sides!![]()
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with all my roosters, i typically take them to the poultry swaps with me... we've got a rooster guy who'll buy all lf roosters for $5 each, feed them up a week or 2 and sell them back to some ethnic groups he caters to... or else they go in the freezer... dorkings are an exceptional meat breed.Here's another question I'm interested to hear from you SFH folks.
If you have multiple roosters and you are only going to keep 1:
What do each of you do with your excess roosters?
I know what I'd do with them if they were other more common breeds, but when they are a more, - "rare" - breed like the SFH, do you handle that differently? I'm just curious to hear your practice - not saying any one way is right, just want to hear from all sides!![]()
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well, the first two (yellow and grey) look possibly crested to me, but IMO grey may be the only pullet. hope i'm wrong.
and are you sure little black's sfh? the others have yellow legs but his aren't...
x2All of mine from BHep started out with pink/tan legs and then all their legs turned yellow as they got closer to maturity. The Swedish description of the breed states they can have pink, tan and yellow legs - so I wouldn't worry just yet about the little black one. He looks a lot like my Frederic did.