Not sure what you're asking about. Do you mean the red color on his legs?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Aha! Nothing to be worried about. The redness is actually a sign of virility, meaning he's mature enough to breed females. Probably excited to be around your girls.![]()
I am glad to see the thread open again. Thanks to the moderators.
I did want to comment about bathing birds before shows. I have bathed some of my show birds, and some I have not. I have not shown enough or have enough experience to notice whether it makes a difference in showing or not with the Buckeye. I would think it would make a bigger difference with a white bird (or a lighter colored bird that showed dirt OR a visibly dirty bird).
Another point: I raise my birds free range, and I have always felt like my younger birds were wilder acting than they should be for a show (especially the cockerels). I worried about this at my first show in 2009. ( I envisioned my birds jumping and bringing down the cages.) However, I noticed a bath seems to calm them down a bit. {I am told the wildlife rehab centers bathe birds of prey as soon as they arrive at the center because of the calming effect of a bath. Several times, I have rescued hurt birds and taken them to the center in Birmingham.} My birds dig in cow, donkey and mule manure so their legs sometimes are covered or stained with the black poop. A bath thoroughly cleans them.
If you do choose to bathe your bird for a show, then you should do so about a week before a show. Otherwise, their feathers won't recover the natural oils if done close to the show date. Also, if I bathe a bird once then show at more than one show, I do not bathe the bird a second time. I noticed one time when I did this, it made the bird look ragged.
I am curious to hear other's opinions & experiences and am open to differing points of view.
I don't know if just their legs being bathed would have the same effect. When I am weighing birds, I clean their legs and feet so my scales don't get filthy. Probably, the young cockerel, being under water with just their head exposed, calms him. I know the first time I bathed a chicken, I thought it was very difficult, but it got easier with practice. Sometimes I have not had the time to bathe or had to substitute so they did not get a bath.Chris do you believe that maybe just bathing their legs and not the feathers would be better and still have the calming affect? Not sure I never tired to bath a bird so I don't have any experience on it. But I can see and agree on what you are saying regarding birds that are free ranged and thes do and will be cruddy over time. I guess that's why a lot of OEGB showers tend to keep their birds in special pens/cages and only let them out certain times.