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Absolutely correct! EE's are tricky in that they can produce brown laying offspring!
One way to think of the 'olive recipe' is that egg shells (calcium carbonite) can only be white or 'stained' blue. Brown eggs are 'painted' over the base (blue or white) right before laying (this is why brown eggs are more sticky and can be smuged when wet).
It takes dark brown 'paint' + a decent blue to make a true olive. The fun is in mixing all the available shades of brown and blue for variety. The EE/Barred Rock mix should lay something 'greenish' but it won't be a nice dark olive.
Oh okay, I thought that the brown of the barred rock would darken the green causing it to be more of a dark green/olive color then an actual green of an ee.
Absolutely correct! EE's are tricky in that they can produce brown laying offspring!
One way to think of the 'olive recipe' is that egg shells (calcium carbonite) can only be white or 'stained' blue. Brown eggs are 'painted' over the base (blue or white) right before laying (this is why brown eggs are more sticky and can be smuged when wet).
It takes dark brown 'paint' + a decent blue to make a true olive. The fun is in mixing all the available shades of brown and blue for variety. The EE/Barred Rock mix should lay something 'greenish' but it won't be a nice dark olive.
Oh okay, I thought that the brown of the barred rock would darken the green causing it to be more of a dark green/olive color then an actual green of an ee.