WA 4-H Might your dominant white looking, from black split for lav chick be a mottled through back? I've been reading a lot about the lav gene recently. Seems like several breeds have had issues with "hidden" mottled genes.We had an interesting afternoon. Right after I posted it was hailing, it turned into a sleety snowy mix. We ended up getting about an inch of slippery stuff. Then my daughter's middle school bus, attempted to go up a huge hill, got stuck, then started sliding down the hill backwards! Needless to say, I had to go and fetch my daughter. She said she's never heard the bus so quiet as all the kids were terrified! There was a long line of cars backed up behind the bus. The elementary school bus driver called to say please wait at the bottom of the hill to pick up the younger daughter, after hearing of the issues the other bus had around the corner from our house! DD's friend texted her about an hour after I picked her up that the bus was still stuck there!
I hope it all melts overnight and we are done with winter! SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOo ready for spring!!!
We now have 3 BLRW's out plus the mystery bantam cochin chick! And a bunch more pips! Thinking the cochin must be a dominant white. She looks like a white cochin chick. Even though all parent stock was black split for lavender. Does this make sense to any genetically knowledgable peeps here?

So it is snowing like crazy here now. The truck is white, the coop is white, and the road is white. I think the only things that are not white are the faster moving black and red calves, the yearlings, and the healer!

By the way I think I remember reading somewhere that sheep and chicken semen does not freeze or defrost well. Comparatively I get semen for the cows from all over, including Canada! I order, pay, they ship, I receive, put it in my tank and watch for heat in the girls and breed 12 hours later. I do like the part where you can just kind of give the semen to the hen and she takes it in. Almost as easy as breeding a pig!
