albinosilver
Songster
- May 17, 2018
- 217
- 447
- 151
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Looks like possibly mottled, or Partridge based pattern.Anyone ever had a chick this colour? What did it end up looking like grown up?
Mille Fleur is mottled.Thanks, I was thinking like a millefleur pattern but mottled is probably more likely
Mille Fleur is mottled.
Yeah, I know. I don't know why there's so many different names for the pattern.There are too many names for chicken colors with that gene!
We call the gene mottled, but then the chicken variety actually gets called Millie Fleur d'Uccle, or Mottled Ancona, or Jubilee Orpington, or Speckled Sussex, or Spangled Cornish, or Pearl Old English Game Bantam, or Porcelain d'Uccle, or...![]()
I'm pretty bad at matching patterned juvenile colors to adult colors, but it reminds me of some Buckeye chicks I once had. They showed quite a lot of patterning in their feathers when they were young, and then grew up to be solid dark brown with black tails.What's your opinion on the chick's color?
My girl Wheaty had little spots in her Juvenile plumage.I'm pretty bad at matching patterned juvenile colors to adult colors, but it reminds me of some Buckeye chicks I once had. They showed quite a lot of patterning in their feathers when they were young, and then grew up to be solid dark brown with black tails.
I've also seen Partridge or Double Laced chicks with similar patterns.
I don't actually think there is any mottling on that chick, but of course I could easily be wrong. My track record for identifying mottling in chicks is really bad--I had a Millie Fleur and a Wheaten chick (same breed, same gender, different colors), that I mis-identified for quite some time. The Wheaten one had little mottled-looking spots that later disappeared, and the Millie Fleur didn't develop her spots until later!