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wait!!! I get it!!! you have to see a bullseye!!so to see if an egg is fertile....the inside of the egg must be a blue green?
No.so to see if an egg is fertile....the inside of the egg must be a blue green?
LOL Yes!wait!!! I get it!!! you have to see a bullseye!!
I like that color
thank you! I love it too!I like that color
so is my bird an olive egger??? or is the solid olive egger bird not a mixed breed?Olive eggers are usually a cross between a blue (or green) egg layer and a dark brown egg layer. One makes the shell color and the other adds a layer of pigment. So far no one has figured out how to make a self-replicating olive-egger. At least not that they are sharing. So most folks do first generation crosses, and even some second or third generation olivers need to be crossed back to keep the right egg color genes flowing. If someone could figure out where the brown paint gene comes from, that would be helpful![]()
There is tons of good breeding and genetic info in this thread, but you have to skim through a lot.
She is either an EE or an OE. Depending on what she was crossed with. She is a very pretty chicken I wouldn't have guess she would be laying those pretty green eggs though by looking at her lol.