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So cute! Here are mine in they're 7th week....starting to overcrowd the tractor but while weather is still so temperamental, it's easier to tarp it
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so they'll have to deal a bit longer. I think you can guess who the roos are :)
 
In this pic, you can see how much lighter the boys are...they're at the bottom of the photo with 2 pullets in between them. I don't see any barring; I suspect that'll come when they get their adult feathers?
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In this pic, you can see how much lighter the boys are...they're at the bottom of the photo with 2 pullets in between them. I don't see any barring; I suspect that'll come when they get their adult feathers? View attachment 1327073
Now you have me all nervous again for mine secretly being boys :thI would think if they were going to be barred they would already have been barred. The cuckoos we ordered with the Sg are already barred and they are almost 6 weeks.
 
If a bird is barred it will show when they feather out. It doesn't come in later.
Hmmm...that's what I thought too. They had some variation in color in their feathers when they first started feathering out but you can see how they turned out LOL My BCM was black with a little copper on chest when he first feathered out....made me wonder if he was in fact a 'he'. Until he started mounting and fertilizing hens at 9 weeks... LOL Went against everything I'd read and been told. Didn't get his adult colors until months later. Same with chicks we hatched. All whiteish at this stage...but months later, ended up with a Columbian patterned roo and a red laced hen. Never saw that coming. So in my limited experience, what I see at 7 weeks is not always what I'll end up with LOL
 
In this pic, you can see how much lighter the boys are...they're at the bottom of the photo with 2 pullets in between them. I don't see any barring; I suspect that'll come when they get their adult feathers? View attachment 1327073
Wow, those two certainly stand out. I hope you'll update when they get their rooster feathers because that certainly isn't what I'd expect to see for sexlinks.
 
You can always try the gold ring on a string test ;) I hear it's quite accurate. I tried it last year and was dismayed to find we had more roos than pullets...figured it was ridiculous and hardly a true test...but alas, it was right. Tried it with my current hatch and it seems to coincide with the ones I'd guess to be pullets by wing carriage, the way they stand, act, and the apparent (or not yet showing) tail feathers. So give it a try. If nothing else, it's a fun little test to distract you until you can tell for sure :D

Not sure...they look a little bit different than mine did....can't put my finger on it...but camera phones don't make it easy! They're definitely similar but there are other blue breeds. My friend got blue Australorps and they look very much like my chicks...so someone more familiar with all breeds will need to weigh in. Where did you get them?

My mother picked them up at a TSC in north eastern WV. I'm sceptical they are SGs, but I have gone through so many lists of pics and forums to try and identify them, the SG was the closest thing I could find. I don't have a lot of experience with different chicken breeds, and at the end of it all it doesn't really matter what breed they are we will so our best to keep them happy and healthy.
I appreciate the help!
 
Hmmm...that's what I thought too. They had some variation in color in their feathers when they first started feathering out but you can see how they turned out LOL My BCM was black with a little copper on chest when he first feathered out....made me wonder if he was in fact a 'he'. Until he started mounting and fertilizing hens at 9 weeks... LOL Went against everything I'd read and been told. Didn't get his adult colors until months later. Same with chicks we hatched. All whiteish at this stage...but months later, ended up with a Columbian patterned roo and a red laced hen. Never saw that coming. So in my limited experience, what I see at 7 weeks is not always what I'll end up with LOL
Yes some things are there from the start and others can take some time.
With the black coppers the copper always takes a while to show up. I've raised quite a few and any signs of copper coming in as a chick always points to males. It still takes time to show in full. I've had hens that were laying before any copper showed up on them.
I've raised a few different blue breeds and the shade of blue has never indicated sex in any I've had.
Some breeds seem to always be the same shade while other breeds can be light to almost black.
Your SGs are very interesting. The two really do stand out in your crowd. In the group I would think yep males. As individuals I actually could see them as pullets.
By what they're supposed to be I would say no doubt pullets.
IMO combs are far from ideal way of sexing.
Eagerly waiting for cockerel hackle and saddle feathers to show or not. Not sure what age that would be with the SG but there will be no mistaking then.
Watch for shiner and darker blue feathers to start showing up on the necks of those two.
I'm still thinking they can't be males just because they are supposed to be sex linked and yours don't have barring. BUT if they are males you will have turned the whole breed on its head and everything about them out the window.
 
Yes some things are there from the start and others can take some time.
With the black coppers the copper always takes a while to show up. I've raised quite a few and any signs of copper coming in as a chick always points to males. It still takes time to show in full. I've had hens that were laying before any copper showed up on them.
I've raised a few different blue breeds and the shade of blue has never indicated sex in any I've had.
Some breeds seem to always be the same shade while other breeds can be light to almost black.
Your SGs are very interesting. The two really do stand out in your crowd. In the group I would think yep males. As individuals I actually could see them as pullets.
By what they're supposed to be I would say no doubt pullets.
IMO combs are far from ideal way of sexing.
Eagerly waiting for cockerel hackle and saddle feathers to show or not. Not sure what age that would be with the SG but there will be no mistaking then.
Watch for shiner and darker blue feathers to start showing up on the necks of those two.
I'm still thinking they can't be males just because they are supposed to be sex linked and yours don't have barring. BUT if they are males you will have turned the whole breed on its head and everything about them out the window.
HAHAHA Well wouldn't that be typical of my life! Everything that happens to me is always weird and so out there that people don't believe me until they see it! It wouldn't be my life if it didn't turn something upside down LOL I have been watching their heads and necks closely for darker feathers...so hard I worry I might burn a hole into their poor skulls hahaha But so far, nothing. I agree with you that were someone else to post a pic of them elsewhere, based on the barring that should be evident, I'd suspect they were pullets with larger combs. But from the onset, they carried their wings higher, didn't get their tail feathers as quickly, held their tails more erect when they did....and just behaved differently. I've come to accept they were my packing peanuts and as a result, roos, but is there a chance they aren't SGs? They were identical to my girls in everything but color...just a lighter grey. In my current barnyard mix we hatched, I can tell who the father is by the shape of the head, eyes, coloration, etc. So I would think if they were a different breed, I would have noticed differences such as that. But even today, with the larger wattles/comb and the way they carry themselves and such, they scream roo. My husband wants to send them to freezer camp by 11 weeks but I don't think they'll be large enough then. And my established roos have gone after the kids a few times and more recently, me. It was a pathetically half-hearted attempt to flog me on both their parts and was the day after we removed 6 hens to dispatch. So I'm extending a little grace under the circumstances. But if they continue to go after my small children, I might have to replace them. Would prefer more purebreds as they are so I know what they contribute but if one of these boys turns out to have the right temperament and such, maybe I'll keep one on. That'll give me time to see the pointy hackles and saddle feathers come in. I can't remember when that started with my current boys. When do they usually start to emerge?
 
I've come to accept they were my packing peanuts and as a result, roos, but is there a chance they aren't SGs?
I didn't know this part.
Where SGs all you ordered? If so I would think if they threw in extras they would be the same. But maybe not.
Now you have me upside down. Maybe they're going to grow to be some fine looking lavender orpington roosters or something. Lol
 

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