Those who need help in sexing peafowl

Status
Not open for further replies.
One thing I have observed, but not sure if it works in every situation is the actual tail, not the train. In this picture notice the two boys have long, barred tails.

One thing I noticed when I had them was the closest one had a grayish tail, whereas the other one had a black tail.
Compare this to a hen, which I observed have generally a shorter tail which has very faint to no barring. When they display, the males will have a longer and pointy train, whereas the hens have a short rounded tail which their train feathers cover. The juvenile peacocks have no train, so their tail is still long and it sticks above their train feathers. They need that longer tail to eventually support a full train as an adult. As others stated, my boys have the fingered feathers on their neck. If my pictures did not show that enough, then here is a picture from Google:
can-stock-photo_csp10649360.jpg

Another thing one can notice is a peacock will begin to have a green outline on their brown back feathers where they will have the scaled feathers as adults. I hope this picture shows that:
which will turn into this-->

By the way, all of these peafowl pictures I am posting are not here anymore :( My dad did not want the peachicks the IB hen hatched out, so they were sold, but their IB mom died in my arms one day after school, and the IB BS peacock pictured above died from a leg infection over the summer...so all of my observations are things I am trying to remember, which may not be 100% right.
 
I know, but I needed sleep!

Zazouse, I believe you had some great pictures of a peacock vs hen displaying showing the tail differences. Could you post some please?
 
Disregard my earlier post about a possible new way to sex based on head color, it was a figment of my imagination!

-Kathy
 
I went to bed at midnight and there was still some things going on, wow! I think I got is. Male: the webbing of the feather are not attached together like a wing feather, Female: the webbing of the feather is attached together like a wing feather. My neighbor told me to watch the breast for something I've never thought possible. She said she had a peachick that was like a dark pied because her IB peachick had a white throat patch and then when the chick was turning 6 months the chick started getting a white neck. The peachick is a male had barring and male primary and had a blue head. She told me maybe the reason why Thor's breast isn't turning blue is because it might be trying to go white. She didn't have a Pied until that peachick. She had only white male, IB peahen and peacock, and BS peacock. An BS split with IB peahen.
 
Last edited:
If Thora's (
lau.gif
) chest were going to turn white I would think that it would alread be white like her throat patch is.

-Kathy
 
Last edited:
I went to bed at midnight and there was still some things going on, wow! I think I got is. Male: the webbing of the feather are not attached together like a wing feather, Female: the webbing of the feather is attached together like a wing feather. My neighbor told me to watch the breast for something I've never thought possible. She said she had a peachick that was like a dark pied because her IB peachick had a white throat patch and then when the chick was turning 6 months the chick started getting a white neck. The peachick is a male had barring and male primary and had a blue head. She told me maybe the reason why Thor's breast isn't turning blue is because it might be trying to go white. She didn't have a Pied until that peachick. She had only white male, IB peahen and peacock, and BS peacock. An BS split with IB peahen.
The hens could have been carrying white or have been dark pied without the owner knowing. I am still learning about my birds. This year I learned my white peacock is split cameo. The neck turning white sounds interesting. Doesn't progressive pied work like that?
 
I don't know this is my first year with Pied. I've been raising IB for a while and helping others raise them though the males would be 3 years or older same with the females. So this is the longest I've had peachicks survive. I'm thinking that might be it I'm not sure, I'm just watching thoroughly documenting anything I can realize different from one day to the other.
 
Pied pair, male on right female on the left
Two boys in back white girl in front

Boy


Gilrs


Cameo hen


Baby boy


Pointy tails boys round tails girls also will depend on if they are getting new tail feathers which you will know by the gaps between feathers.
 
I don't know I think it would be white by now but also when I was looking at photos those dark spots on the neck used to stop at his shoulder and now they are going past them. So right now feathers are changing and I'm blundering in the dark what's going on. I see more and more barring each day and male primaries, he has a long skinny neck and he has a large fat breast his green feathers are turning blue, that tells me male though there's' white edging on the breast tells me female like. I don't know if he's going white so I don't know I'm blundering in the dark what's going on with Thor's breast color.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom