What breed or mix is this?!

I only ask because ALL of the other Easter Egger pullets from this order look very mich like they have eiyher Welsummers or Barnevelders somewhere in their make-up, on the brown laying side of the family. Only one came out mostly white, and as a day old chick she was mostly yellow and black. I keep saying she... but i mean Cruella.
Maybe they do. It could also just be that they have those genetics that were passed down through the EE line. But judging by the EE hens I can see in your pics, I can see how they kind of look like welsummers. That coloring is actually very typical of EE's, so they likely aren't first or second generation welsummer crosses. To my knowledge, hatchery EEs are made simply by crossing EE to EE.
 
Funny enough, we were just talking a few months ago about getting a roo of our own, both for protection as well as to hatch our own chicks. Ordering chicks by mail can be VERY pricey. We had a few broodies so that's why we bought this last batch. We let them, well, her (eventually one of them decided to quit being a mom and the other adopted all 18!) raise them up. Had I known about Cruella, I would have hand raised some of them so he would be a bit more tame/calm/less crazy. I definitely don't want a lap roo, but I would like to be in the same area as him without panic ensuing. At what age should I expect the typical roo stuff? Crowing , challenging me, mointing the ladies, etc? We've owned chickens for several years now, but never a roo.
First of all, a good rooster should never challenge you. Being friendly and/or cuddly towards him actually will sometimes make it so he's overly confident around you, which leads to attacking. Rooster brains are different from peoples', so they interpret the love differently. I do not have first-hand experience but there are many members who do and I highly recommend taking their advice. If your rooster does anything aggressive or challenging, my first recommendation would be the Stew Pot! You could rehome him, but I personally feel that passing problems on to other people is not how to solve the problem. If you don't want panic ensuing, you may just try to be calmer, slower and more predictable around the flock.

Also, talk about expensive! We bought sexed bantam females from MPC and they were like $20 each! :thThey were worth it though, since literally no one else supplies sexed bantams.
 
Maybe they do. It could also just be that they have those genetics that were passed down through the EE line. But judging by the EE hens I can see in your pics, I can see how they kind of look like welsummers. That coloring is actually very typical of EE's, so they likely aren't first or second generation welsummer crosses. To my knowledge, hatchery EEs are made simply by crossing EE to EE.
Thanks for that! I guess in my mind I pictured those big hatcheries as only carrying purebred chickens and when they needed more Easter Eggers, they just took a "brown" rooster and put him I with some "blue" ladies (or vice versa) and let them go crazy. I have never really thought of Easter Eggers as a "proper" breed, although now that you explained that, I'm not sure why I didn't. Not proper as in standards, but proper as in a hatchery would keep an actual breeding stock of Easter Eggers that could be second generation (F2), F10, or F50...
 
Thanks for that! I guess in my mind I pictured those big hatcheries as o my carrying purebred chickens and when they needed more Easter Eggers, they just took a "brown" rooster and put him I with some "blue" ladies (or vice versa) and let them go crazy. I have never really thought of Easter Eggers as a "proper" breed, although now that you explained that, I'm not sure why I didn't. Not proper as in standards, but proper as in a hatchery would keep an actual breeding stock of Easter Eggers that could be second generation (F2), F10, or F50...
Yeah, that's a common misconception. The whole origin of EEs, and the ameraucanas vs araucanas vs EE thing, can really throw people off. I think I have thought and studied this all hard enough to understand it, lol!
 
A follow-up question... since Cruella is a roo, if we want a roo for breeding purposes and we have 35 females, will he be able to handle that load of females, or should we get another roo to ensure fertile eggs?
 
A follow-up question... since Cruella is a roo, if we want a roo for breeding purposes and we have 35 females, will he be able to handle that load of females, or should we get another roo to ensure fertile eggs?
It all depends on the rooster. Some would totally thrash and abuse 35 hens, while others are perfectly content with just one. I would check the eggs, see if most are fertile, and if not you can try another rooster, just make sure he's gentle with the ladies. ;)
 
I got a surprise roo too from an all “female” batch of sexed chicks. Sexing is not 100%, and it’s good they only got 1 wrong!
He’s very handsome.

Thanks! His looks have certainly grown on us. For the longest time he looked like this scraggly little mangy thing and we thought the gold tint was perhaps where he was sleeping on a low roost bar and was being "decorated" by those sleeping above him. Now that he is filling out, the golden color has become more pronounced and has evened out. And his tail feathers have an almost iridescent blue and green color if the sun hits them just so. So even though I have never really been a fan of white chickens (namely because of the fact that their feathers show every drip or dropping) i think the contrast of white and black is quite striking. Although I do always picture (and probably always will) Cruella DeVille from the classic 101 Dalmations, especially when she is reading one of the other chicks the riot act!
 
His parents are probably also easter eggers, as most EE's are not the result of crossing two breeds, but the result of breeding EE together. So his parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents etc are likely all EE. Like I said, not all EEs are the result of blue egger x brown egger, but rather EE x EE as they actually came first, even before the modern blue egg breeds were created.
I hope you get that, it's complicated and I probably worded it badly...

Also, most easter eggers have small combs, regardless of gender. They are called pea combs.
Even professional sexers usually only get a 90% accuracy rate. So I'm glad you are able to keep him! :)

Can I bother to ask one more question? Cruella is 4.5 months but hasn't started growing or trying to mount the hens. Also, I don't see any spurs to speak of. When should all of this start to develop? Thanks in advance!
 
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