these choices

Easter Eggers are wonderful birds. I had a great flock that I enjoyed very much. They all layed beautiful eggs and were very pretty. They came in a variety of patterns and colors.

This is the description I had in my breed catalog:

The Easter Egger is a chicken well known for its ability to lay blue and green eggs. None of the birds in this flock lay brown or pinkish eggs. I have selected the majority of the birds to have muffs and beards, but occasionally a non-bearded or muffed bird will make it to the breeding pen because of an interesting color. Egg color can range from a light pastel blue, sea foam green, olive green, and finally to a deep army green. Some of the green eggs will have violet or chocolate colored speckles on them. The darkest green eggs are produced by Cuckoo Marans x Easter Egger Crosses. The color of the birds can be as much of a surprise as their eggs. Adults can be found in solid colors like buff, white, black, blue, splash, red, and brown, or in broken colors like cuckoo, wheaten, silver duckwing, partridge, penciled, columbian, and any other variation you can imagine. The hens lay very well and the roosters are very friendly. Extra Ameraucanas are on this yard, so occasionally you may receive a pure blue, black, splash, or white Ameraucana chick.

Ameraucanas on the other hand are a pure breed recognized by the APA in 8 different colors in both large fowl and bantam. Hatcheries don't carry Ameraucanas or at least not any that I know of. However they sell more birds under the label Ameraucana/Araucana.

Edited to Add: Oopps. Speckledhen beat me to the punch.
 
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You should see what they have at the feed store before you set your mind on any breeds. Just having a list of ones you'd like is good (and you've alrady done that!). At my local feed store, we only have a choice of RIR, BO, sex-links, and BR.
 
Barred plymouth rock & wyandottes & Easter Eggers. I took my 99 year old Mamaw a mix of my egg last week that had a few green and blue eggs in it. Made her day! She did not know that chickens layed colored eggs.
 
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I love my orps. They are docile and blend into the flock. They lay well and they are big enough to take care of themselves and they do.

I would go with the Plymouth rocks, barred, white, partridge whatever. I LOVE these birds. The roos are very handsome and the hens are extremely friendly and HUGE.

I ordered the speckled Sussex and have a few EE's in my flock. They are there because I have colored eggs. I have only identified one in the flock so far and she is ALL black and very beautiful.

I know nothing of the wyandotte chickies.
 

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