BlueTheBrahma
Songster
- Sep 2, 2021
- 589
- 1,850
- 211
Thank you so much, this is really helpful. It will be interesting to compare this to the English one.
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Thank you so much, this is really helpful. It will be interesting to compare this to the English one.
I'd like to see the English one if you can post it.
Depending on the color of their eggs. If not they're culls... I need to thin the herd.
She will be bred to an Isabel Ameraucana, then I'll breed the offspring back and so forth. I am growing out 6 Isabel Ameraucanas to see what I've got, my plan is to keep a cockerel and 2 pullets, and this little lady along with the 2 Wheaten Ameraucanas to keep feather quality good down the line. So, I'll be breeding pure Isabel Ameraucanas, and some Isabel OE's. I also plan on some English Orp/Ameraucan EE's just for fun. If all goes well, I may get a Wheaten Marans cockerel also. This is the plan anyway, lol
I think that comes from the misconception that the darkest egg genes are sex linked. Chooksman always argued otherwise. If you know the roo is from an exceptionally (eggceptiinally) dark egg, you are certain that all the offspring inherit it, but if all your hens lay dark eggs, this is just as good as using a dark egg roo.never bred OE but read somewhere here that the roo should be dark egger and hen blue/green egger in order to get nice olive colour.