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This can happen sometimes when you order from a hatchery, too. Unless you pick a sex link breed (females and males are different colors), sexing day old chicks isn't 100 percent accurate.
I was going to order from a hatchery but ended up getting our chicks from a local breeder. I'm so glad I did! I've since learned things about the way the big hatcheries operate that make me grateful I didn't support that. I can't prove it, but I believe the genetic stock of my chickens is superior to what I would have gotten from a hatchery (they breed for quantity, not for quality). Mine are certainly healthy, beautiful birds, and I was able to see the parents and what conditions the chickens were kept in before I got the chicks. That was worth a lot to me.
One of our five chicks did turn out to be a rooster. We tried to keep him, but had to find a new home for him when a neighbor complained (roosters are against the law where we live). It was sad to let him go, but I'm still happy that we were able to have him for a year and see how a flock is with a rooster in it. It was fascinating and wonderful to watch the natural behaviors.
And before he left, our little rooster fertilized a bunch of eggs which have now hatched out into beautiful chicks. Some of them will be little cockerels that we will need to find new homes for, too, but this time we plan to rehome them before they are full grown.
This can happen sometimes when you order from a hatchery, too. Unless you pick a sex link breed (females and males are different colors), sexing day old chicks isn't 100 percent accurate.
I was going to order from a hatchery but ended up getting our chicks from a local breeder. I'm so glad I did! I've since learned things about the way the big hatcheries operate that make me grateful I didn't support that. I can't prove it, but I believe the genetic stock of my chickens is superior to what I would have gotten from a hatchery (they breed for quantity, not for quality). Mine are certainly healthy, beautiful birds, and I was able to see the parents and what conditions the chickens were kept in before I got the chicks. That was worth a lot to me.
One of our five chicks did turn out to be a rooster. We tried to keep him, but had to find a new home for him when a neighbor complained (roosters are against the law where we live). It was sad to let him go, but I'm still happy that we were able to have him for a year and see how a flock is with a rooster in it. It was fascinating and wonderful to watch the natural behaviors.
And before he left, our little rooster fertilized a bunch of eggs which have now hatched out into beautiful chicks. Some of them will be little cockerels that we will need to find new homes for, too, but this time we plan to rehome them before they are full grown.