I sex the best I can when they hatch, noticing little drab details, or striking features early on. Like one of my chicks has a giant yellow comb while one has a drab and almost dark colored one. Since they are the same breed, I know 1 is a boy, and 1 is a girl from experience. They are single comb, so that makes it easy. On a rose comb or pea comb, the girls are usually pretty flat in the comb area for a long time. The other chick, has a yellow comb too, but it's small. So... jury is out. If I had more chicks, I would sell the obvious boys AND the "I dunno" chicks ASAP. Putting the drab boring looking pullets in their own brooder. Some of the "I dunno" chicks will likely be female. It's your call if you want to keep those or not.
The sooner you sell or give away, the smaller your feed bill. If I have to feed them for 6 months, I lean towards breeding or eating, depending. Any mean rooster is automatic freezer camp. I'm convinced attitude is genetic. I've never hatched a mean rooster from my own eggs, and never bred a mean rooster for hatching eggs.
The longer you wait in your decision, the more counter productive it is. Building a bachelor pad for the favorite 2-4 is fine. But when you have 20 extra, you need a plan. And the sooner you can identify gender, the better. Much easier to sell cute chicks for $1 each than it is to give away a half grown roo with the crow of a 13 year old boy. Sell them early or grow them out to their full potential.
The sooner you sell or give away, the smaller your feed bill. If I have to feed them for 6 months, I lean towards breeding or eating, depending. Any mean rooster is automatic freezer camp. I'm convinced attitude is genetic. I've never hatched a mean rooster from my own eggs, and never bred a mean rooster for hatching eggs.
The longer you wait in your decision, the more counter productive it is. Building a bachelor pad for the favorite 2-4 is fine. But when you have 20 extra, you need a plan. And the sooner you can identify gender, the better. Much easier to sell cute chicks for $1 each than it is to give away a half grown roo with the crow of a 13 year old boy. Sell them early or grow them out to their full potential.
