Myself and a few others have been refering to the non-cream legbars as light brown legbar. Light brown being the base with legbar being the pattern since it isn't a true crele type.
Good solution. Let's see if it sticks!
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Myself and a few others have been refering to the non-cream legbars as light brown legbar. Light brown being the base with legbar being the pattern since it isn't a true crele type.
@Junibutt cute chicks!
It's a work in progress here in the US with Cream Legbars. "Gold Legbar" is an actual different breed that looks similar, crestless, that lays a white egg. So what we have here in the US are Cream Legbars and improperly colored Cream Legbars, we don't really have a name for these gold colored birds. Cream is a recessive gene so both parents have to carry it in order for the chicks to be cream. The only way it can be "lost" is if there was an outcross at some point and the birds are no longer pure for the Cream gene. Once you get your flock back to cream it cannot be lost.
Myself and a few others have been refering to the non-cream legbars as light brown legbar. Light brown being the base with legbar being the pattern since it isn't a true crele type.
Okay now I understand. Lets see what I have. I guess will have to wait about 2-3 months to find out? So if my source had pure cream, there is no way I would not have pure cream. However if the source somehow got polluted by a non-cream rooster, that will be the only way I will get a non-cream Legbar.
Thanks!
Just love your chicks~~
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You can look for cream on the pullet's neck at 6-8 weeks. Roosters I find it takes longer to be sure, 10-12 weeks, look at the neck, saddle, and wing triangle (google it if you aren't sure where that is) to tell cream from gold.
Very cute. I never tire of looking at cute baby pictures