The Silver Laced Wyandotte Thread

So little disclaimer... I am not a breeder (not even a backyard breeder) nor do I intend to be. But the genetics piece fascinates me. SO I got to wondering.... What happens if you a breed a SLW to a GLW or a SLW to a RLBW or a GLW to a RLBW???

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So little disclaimer... I am not a breeder (not even a backyard breeder) nor do I intend to be. But the genetics piece fascinates me. SO I got to wondering.... What happens if you a breed a SLW to a GLW or a SLW to a RLBW or a GLW to a RLBW???

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for clarification..what is a RLBW?
If it is a red Wyandotte laced in blue I would love to see a picture please!! I bet it is beautiful!!!!!


Could you mean Blue laced Red?
 
Took new pictures of the SLW today..they are growing up and filling out nice




I just love the combs on these guys..now I just need to reproduce it in the blue laced
 
Quote:
Adding BLR to a mixed Lace Wyandotte flock​

So if I add blue-laced reds to my mixed flock of silver and gold lace, what will I get?

We are dealing with two genes simultaneously at this point -- the sex-link S-gene that controls the gold/red versus silver base color and the co-dominant Bl-gene that controls whether the marking color is black, blue or splash. A freely mixing flock with roosters and hens of both colors can give the following patterns...

SSblbl and Ss+blbl = silver lace rooster
S-blbl = silver lace hen
s+s+blbl = gold lace rooster (likely darker red than the preferred gold)
s+-blbl = gold lace hen (likely darker red than the preferred gold)
SSBlbl and Ss+Blbl = blue-laced white rooster (not showable)
S-Blbl = blue-laced white hen (not showable)
s+s+Blbl = BLR rooster (likely lighter than the preferred deep red)
s+-Blbl = BLR hen (likely lighter than the preferred deep red)
SSBlBl and Ss+BlBl = splash-laced white rooster (not showable)
S-BlBl = splash-laced white hen (not showable)
s+s+BlBl = splash-laced red/gold rooster (not showable)
s+-BlBl = splash-laced red/gold hen (not showable)

If the goal is really to produce show birds, this mixed breeding is going to create a lot of unshowable colors that have to be culled. But if you just want a pretty backyard flock, this can get you there! Be sure to give some thought to which color rooster is used (assuming you are only running one or a couple roosters with your flock) - use of an SS silver rooster, for example, will mean that you will never get any s+- red/gold hens. If you want all the colors, use two roosters -- one with the most recessive genotype (s+s+blbl = gold lace), and a second (any silver) to get hens of the other sex-linked color .
 

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