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Here's the final evaluation on the Turken experiment - 2nd Generation!
Okay, first I hatched out about 8 or so Turken / Aloha crosses.
I culled the solid colored chicks.
That left me with FOUR chicks that showed color.
Here they are:

Two Boys.
Two Girls.


Wow, quite a difference, huh?
So, now they are reaching breeding age. I am in my final "hatching frenzy" - all this last season, since I wasn't able to break apart individual pens, I have worked on BLASTING hundreds of Aloha chicks into the general chicken population of Phoenix, hoping that somewhere out there, the perfect Aloha hen exists in some person's backyard. Or that maybe, if something happened here, somehow I could re-build again using local stock.
I did not keep numbers on chicks that I've sold - but I have been averaging about 60-80 chicks per "egg tray" in my big incubator and I have been hatching and selling 3-4 trays of chicks per month since November or December? That means I've sold probably 720 Aloha and Buff Sussex blend chicks - minimum - and very possibly up to 1000+ Aloha chicks sold locally since October, which is when I first started loading the big incubator. (Though my girls did not get really going until December, a few only started laying then.)
Since I could not do small planned hatches, I figured the next best thing would be getting massive numbers of chicks out there. Which I think I've done quite well at, LOL.
ANYWAY - now that's about over, and it's time to GET PICKY. Gotta get numbers down to my "very very best" Alohas, so I can better my odds of getting the right chicks.
I'm keeping this hen, obviously. Her size - larger Aloha. Smallish for a "big chicken" - but much better than the itty-bitty original Aloha size. No yellow legs - but I know she carries. She's a good one!!!

I'm also keeping this rooster, for now:

His color is WAY dark and his spots are pretty minimal. But he's kind of an improvement on his Speckled Sussex / Buff Sussex daddy, because he DOES show the larger more masculine comb, and longer tail of the Aloha line. I also know that he carries the gene for yellow legs, which is Dad, did not. His size is good - especially in how wide he is compared to the teeny, narrow Aloha hens.
I'm going to sell these two:

While I prefer this boy's lighter color, he inherited the Sussex tiny comb and short tail. It's hard to believe he's even a rooster, isn't it?
Here is a pic of his hackle feathers:

And meanwhile, this hen hit the 4 month old mark, and dropped a ton of white. Sure, she carries spots and yellow legs, but I have other Alohas that do as well - and are similar size!

The pair will sell for a good amount on Craigslist. They are young and lovely, but I'd rather keep the two best.
Especially since Deb shared photos of the NICE other Naked Neck chicks that she's raising down there!
PLUS - I have this hen growing out:

And THIS baby rooster in the baby pen:

Until those two babies are fully grown, I could pair the two that I like in a teeny breeder pen over the summer - just the too-dark rooster and the super-spotty hen that I do like - and try to hatch out teeny batches of Naked Neck Aloha chicks (In theory, some of them should have yellow legs, and I could keep the yellow legged babies with most spots.) That might be an OK mini-project to work on over the summer when large batches of chicks are impractical.
Okay, first I hatched out about 8 or so Turken / Aloha crosses.
I culled the solid colored chicks.
That left me with FOUR chicks that showed color.
Here they are:
Two Boys.
Two Girls.
Wow, quite a difference, huh?
So, now they are reaching breeding age. I am in my final "hatching frenzy" - all this last season, since I wasn't able to break apart individual pens, I have worked on BLASTING hundreds of Aloha chicks into the general chicken population of Phoenix, hoping that somewhere out there, the perfect Aloha hen exists in some person's backyard. Or that maybe, if something happened here, somehow I could re-build again using local stock.
I did not keep numbers on chicks that I've sold - but I have been averaging about 60-80 chicks per "egg tray" in my big incubator and I have been hatching and selling 3-4 trays of chicks per month since November or December? That means I've sold probably 720 Aloha and Buff Sussex blend chicks - minimum - and very possibly up to 1000+ Aloha chicks sold locally since October, which is when I first started loading the big incubator. (Though my girls did not get really going until December, a few only started laying then.)
Since I could not do small planned hatches, I figured the next best thing would be getting massive numbers of chicks out there. Which I think I've done quite well at, LOL.
ANYWAY - now that's about over, and it's time to GET PICKY. Gotta get numbers down to my "very very best" Alohas, so I can better my odds of getting the right chicks.
I'm keeping this hen, obviously. Her size - larger Aloha. Smallish for a "big chicken" - but much better than the itty-bitty original Aloha size. No yellow legs - but I know she carries. She's a good one!!!
I'm also keeping this rooster, for now:
His color is WAY dark and his spots are pretty minimal. But he's kind of an improvement on his Speckled Sussex / Buff Sussex daddy, because he DOES show the larger more masculine comb, and longer tail of the Aloha line. I also know that he carries the gene for yellow legs, which is Dad, did not. His size is good - especially in how wide he is compared to the teeny, narrow Aloha hens.
I'm going to sell these two:
While I prefer this boy's lighter color, he inherited the Sussex tiny comb and short tail. It's hard to believe he's even a rooster, isn't it?
Here is a pic of his hackle feathers:
And meanwhile, this hen hit the 4 month old mark, and dropped a ton of white. Sure, she carries spots and yellow legs, but I have other Alohas that do as well - and are similar size!
The pair will sell for a good amount on Craigslist. They are young and lovely, but I'd rather keep the two best.
Especially since Deb shared photos of the NICE other Naked Neck chicks that she's raising down there!
PLUS - I have this hen growing out:
And THIS baby rooster in the baby pen:
Until those two babies are fully grown, I could pair the two that I like in a teeny breeder pen over the summer - just the too-dark rooster and the super-spotty hen that I do like - and try to hatch out teeny batches of Naked Neck Aloha chicks (In theory, some of them should have yellow legs, and I could keep the yellow legged babies with most spots.) That might be an OK mini-project to work on over the summer when large batches of chicks are impractical.