I wish I'd taken photos of them at 2 weeks but was having phone issues. If I remember right (and that's a huge 'if'...a lot hit the fan this year so far), all the chicks displayed some degree of that feather pattern when they first started feathering out. Which is why I never connected it to the barred gene having never had barred birds. From what I'd been told by Hoover (which we now know is wrong), the males are light grey and the females are darker. That was consistent with what I had so I didn't question it at first. I guess we're back to my life being upside down and odd and my boys having some weird recessive gene that keeps them unbarred? Unless the hackles and saddles do come in barred and then I suppose that would be an interesting twist. As for the girls, they no longer have that stripey pattern on their wings either...perhaps they never did and it was just the way the feathers came in that made it appear so? Going forward, I'll be better about documenting and comparing to true barred birds. For now, I can just chalk it up to a learning experience and continue to watch how they feather outNether of your light suspected cockerels are barred.
I agree double gene barred is easier to see on blue then single gene barred.
If they're barred its not just in one area and it is there with the first feathers and doesn't change with adult feathers.
I have seen many lose color and appear lighter since the barring gets more white but that is mostly roosters when they get 3 or 4 years old and up.
Attached is a single gene barred lavender chick.
Its lavender looks similar to the shade of yours.
You can see the barring pretty easily and you can see they're the first feathers coming in.
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