Yep I've seen a whole lot of silkied seramas. I don't care how these birds got the silky (spelling it this way to keep me from reading it as the breed) gene, or how long ago it popped into their family. Because if they fit the Ameraucana standard and lay Ameraucana eggs, they're Ameraucanas to me!
I can see why some people would get huffy over calling them that. To me, the silky gene is no different from the frizzle gene - just another thing that modifies the way the feathers are constructed. Frizzle is common enough now to where people accept it pretty easily. If it looks like the breed, it's the breed, just frizzled form - no questions asked. Hopefully soon these will be seen the same way
Which I'm sure after being bred to SQ Amers for a few generations should help a lot. Hopefully any hidden other silkie traits that may or may not be present, will soon be bred away.
There's also silky in pigeons and doves. It's a bit different though...sort of like a mix between silkie and frizzle in chickens. In two doses, it's ugly and brittle like frizzle, but in one dose, looks pretty and soft like silkie
So who all is going to be breeding these guys? Besides the OP, of course. It'd be useful to know for people looking to get into this 'new variety' (like me
), and may want to get eggs/birds from more than one family being worked on.