Kaussandra -
Skyfire and the roo should give you 50% chance birds with Skyfire's blue, and 50% chance birds with normal black patterning. The females will be in a 50/50 of either silver or gold, meaning you'll get white and gray ones or white and black ones, or black and brown ones or gray and brown ones like Skyfire. Males will be 50/50 chance of either golden duckwing like your rooster or normal BBR (black breasted red) - However, depending on your rooster being heterozygous or homozygous for Columbian, half or all of them will have a bunch of white like your rooster, the other half or none will be black white golden hackles/saddle and red shoulders. Also depending on the Columbian present, the females will be 50/50 patterned identically like Skyfire and patterned more like the Easter Eggers I showed, or all of them looking more like the girls I showed. Silvers out of the breeding will be the best determination of your rooster having both or one Columbian gene. If you get a silver female out of the bunch with salmon or brown coloration on her breast, your rooster is heterozygous for Columbian, meaning he'll throw 50/50 birds with the gene.
Apologies if that sounded confusing. I could roll out some photos if that helps.
POL means point of lay. It refers to pullets at I believe 18 or 21 weeks, not sure which.
For a visual aid. . . (NOT my birds - just a visual reference)
Duckwing / Black Breasted Red - Though in wildtype, it varies as you may know, and the black pencilling can increase
True Partridge.
Though some
might have partridge base instead of duckwing, they need the lacing gene to actually make their patterning a true partridge. I've yet to see Easter Eggers have the lacing gene. (ones not crossed with a laced bird
)