Wow he is handsome. I had hoped that the Silkies would have had better combs. The eggs came from a BYC member in Virginia. I think at this point that most of the chicks were boys. I know that I was only able to tell for sure about one of the boys that had been hatched on Dec 11th. I am beginning to think that maybe all the chicks were cockerels. I didn't have a great hatch rate. I am wondering if the bator temp makes a difference on whether or not a person gets boys or girls.Quote:The cockerels were hatched on Christmas day. In person there it looks like they have some white in their feathering. The eggs were Blue, and Splash. I would be willing to take them back if Shyla can't find another home for them.
Were all the blues, boys? The blue one I got from you turned into a very pretty thing when he molted into his adult feathers about a month ago and figured out he was a boy. Two of the splash are girls and laying, one is broody. The darker splash I still am not sure on. We'll find out eventually.
Here he is a few weeks ago. I need a new one of him. He's almost black up front now and slowly working on the saddle and tail. And he has a ton more feathers making him look thicker. I love him he's so sweet.
![]()
I know that at least a few types of animals can sort of 'select' based on conditions at the time (plentiful food vs. not much), so it would make sense that eggs might respond differently to temperature. That'd make an interesting experiment!