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Something we need to keep in mind - of the remaining 75% smooth-feathered babies, you will be unable to tell which are carriers and which are (while no longer pure) just plain ol' ameraucanas.
To me, that unfortuantly means insta-cull. While I would want to keep them for blue eggs in my laying flock, I refuse to run the risk of letting their hookless genetics mix out into the wild. No matter how well I tag my birds and keep meticulous records, there are always uncontrollable variables. I sell /rehome birds from time to time - and can never control who buys eating eggs with the goal of cheap hatching eggs.
While I understand where you're coming from, I don't have the heart to kill them all just b/c of their genetics. I'm planning on penning them separately from my other blue egg layers and using their eggs for my family and friends (that don't have chickens or hatch eggs) to eat. I don't mind culling some of the roos for eating as well, but I couldn't just cull them all.
ETA: I may also breed some of them back to fluffy birds to continue on from there, since the carriers will give a higher 50% fluffies when bred to a fluffy bird.