champ.jpg

Buckeye

Buckeyes came into existence through the efforts of Mrs. Nettie Metcalf in Warren, Ohio. This is...

General Information

Breed Purpose
Dual Purpose
Comb
Pea
Broodiness
Average
Climate Tolerance
Cold
Egg Productivity
Medium
Egg Size
Medium
Egg Color
Brown
Breed Temperament
Friendly, Calm, Bears confinement well.
Breed Colors/Varieties
No variations in color, but also available as a Bantam.
Breed Size
Large Fowl and Bantam
12754865_940126432773260_412641775_o.jpg

Buckeyes came into existence through the efforts of Mrs. Nettie Metcalf in Warren, Ohio. This is the only species of chicken known to have been developed by a woman.

Mrs. Metcalf started crossing Buff Cochin males with Barred Rock females. She was not happy with this cross because she considered them large and lazy so a black breasted red game fowl male was introduced to the resulting Buff Cochin/Barred Rock offspring. This produced several red offspring and the early ancestors were born.

Mrs. Metcalf's chickens were being bred and raised at the same time as another red breed which was gaining popularity. That "RED" breed is known as the Rhode Island Red. Many believe Mrs. Metcalf's red chickens predated the now common egg layer. As early as 1896, she learned of RIR being bred on the east coast and traded stock with breeders of the new variety. She promptly named her birds, "Pea Combed Rhode Island Red". This hurt her new breed more than it helped with their popularity, so prior to exhibiting at the fair in 1902, she introduced her chickens as Buckeyes. The American Poultry Association first recognized the Buckeye as an individual unique breed in 1904.

Buckeyes, structurally, are very different from a Rhode Island Red. They are more slanted with broader backs and more muscular thighs. Buckeyes, in the early 1900’s, had a similar appearance to the Cornish chicken. Buckeyes have a rich mahogany outer plumage with a slate color down. They are tight feathered with the roosters having black/green irridescent tail feathers. The hens have black tips. Both sexes have pea combs with small to medium sized wattles. The occasional single comb with larger wattles is still found in the breed but is not preferred by poultry exhibitors. The pea comb and tight feathering makes the Buckeye very suitable to colder climates. In fact, they handle the cold so well, they will continue to lay throughout the winter months. They are also tolerant of very hot and dry conditions.

Roosters average about 9 pounds and hens 6 1/2 to 7 pounds. They make wonderful dual purpose birds with yellow skin, large breast area and good thigh meat.

Buckeyes have their own unique personalities. They are a very active bird that prefer to free range though a large coop with run is suitable. They are a vocal bird and will spat with each other, lifting their neck feathers frequently asserting their place in the pecking order. Roosters can be territorial during breeding season. Hens are friendly and make good pets. Pullets will start to lay medium sized eggs at about 6 1/2 months. They are good egg layers. Buckeyes will sometimes go broody and raise chicks.

Buckeye chicks will range in color from light yellow to almost a light mahogany. Chicks can have a dark strip on their backs. They feather quickly though growth rate may be slower than other dual purpose breeds. Another unique trait to the Buckeye is they will actively mouse as well as a cat, even better at times. Buckeye roosters have a range of calls they make.

The Buckeye shows some traits of game fowl in its frame and disposition, being assertive in character and a very good forager. They are known for their friendliness and are wonderful with children. Despite its game heritage, it tolerates confinement well, although it will be much happier and produce better if allowed to range on grass. A good meat producer and layer of between 150 to 200 eggs per year, the Buckeye is a dual purpose chicken well–suited to small farmyard and backyard flocks. The Buckeye breed has also been gaining popularity in the exhibition world and gained possibly it's first ever Grand Master Exhibitor (Joe Shumaker of Shumaker Farm) in 2014.

dafd4cd3_buckeye-32682-260376.jpeg
Buckeye eggs

images.jpg
Buckeye chick

e9579a2f_900x900px-LL-6fd132af__20160301_192328_wm.jpeg
Buckeye juvenile

images4.jpg
Buckeye hens

champ.jpg
Buckeye rooster

For more information on this breed and their owners' and breeders' experiences with them, see our breed discussion here: https://www.backyardchickens.com/threads/chicken-breed-focus-buckeye.1018336/

Latest reviews

Buckeyes
Pros: Free Range Foragers
Friendly, Funny, Fiesty
Cold hardy
Cons: Some chicks can be agressive
Potientally gamey behavior (this may only be an issue with close confinement or reduced resources, I call it a pro for free range)
I've raised Buckeye hens for over a year now and I love them and planning for more. Buckeyes are well adapted for free range, able to forage independently on pasture. They're out for bugs, and pretty much anything that crawls, hops, or flies out of the grass.

In addition to keeping an eye out for insects they are good at spotting danger as well. I don't own a rooster, but my hens are keen to sound the alert if a snake is in the grass or a hawk is flying over.

I have hatchery chicks and I've read of as well as experienced some agression with day-olds, so if you find you have one or two that want to wrestle everyone else down in the brooder this is probably normal; and a likely testament to their game fowl roots. Just be prepared to isolate the offender immediately if that happens.

Beyond this they will establish a pecking order so if you see them dancing at each other it shouldn't last too long before they lose interest or one submits.

Probably one of my favorite things about them is their personalities. They have all sorts of little calls and coos, and are very curious. They will talk back, and converse, and are overall very vocal, but not loud or abnoxious.

I highly recommend this spiritied American breed for those who free range or have plenty of space for them to go forth and forage.
Purchase Price
Around $5
Purchase Date
September 2021

Attachments

  • flock2.jpg
    flock2.jpg
    425.4 KB · Views: 49
  • girle.JPG
    girle.JPG
    428.5 KB · Views: 44
  • buckeye2.jpg
    buckeye2.jpg
    338 KB · Views: 48
  • buckeyebath.JPG
    buckeyebath.JPG
    418.8 KB · Views: 57
Not amazingly predator savvy but… great
Pros: Meat
Friendly
Good foragers
Don’t blink at snow (cold hardy)
Decently easy to train
Cons: Not as great at protecting themselves from hawks as other breeds
These are our best breed for winter. (Zone 5). They charge out into the snow like it’s not snowy. Even our Chantecler’s try and avoid the snow 🙄.
These are great for kids!
Ours come to our front door every day at 3pm because I used to feed them at 3 as younger chicks.
Purchase Date
2020

Attachments

  • B01BD06E-C753-46E6-9334-6873B670AE52.jpeg
    B01BD06E-C753-46E6-9334-6873B670AE52.jpeg
    525.9 KB · Views: 75
  • AC1230D8-252A-4C47-87DE-14BD7EB5AF3F.jpeg
    AC1230D8-252A-4C47-87DE-14BD7EB5AF3F.jpeg
    619.3 KB · Views: 78
  • Like
Reactions: AGeese
Pros: Awesome meat, many eggs, fast growing, respectful roosters, no drama, great foragers, very cold hardy
Cons: Goes broody (bantam Buckeye hens are cursed by bad luck)
When we first got Buckeyes I thought we were getting the absolute most boring looking birds ever. But without those looks, we probably wouldn't have a bird with so many great qualities.
The roosters are awesome natural leaders and make great carcasses, and all Buckeyes have neat personalities. The best part is their cold tolerance and free range abilities of course.
I love my Bantam Buckeyes even more than the LF but I swear both purchased hens were cursed by bad luck.
My first prolapsed and died with her first egg, the second at least waited to die until she produced a few chicks. (But still, she got sucked up by a tornado just a few days before the county fair. :confused: welcome to the Midwest ppl.)
AGeese
AGeese
Definitely the personalities. My new hens are something else... a little more whinny than the first ones, but probably a little more babied :)
  • Like
Reactions: Amer

Comments

I just checked out your website. Beautiful birds! (And the young lady showing them is very lovely as well!) I'm very new to raising chickens and have been seriously considering adding Buckeyes to my flock. I have to say that your review and photos have convinced me to do so, but as home production birds, not show birds. I'm considering ordering them from Meyer Hatchery. Do you have any feedback on them as a supplier?
 
I got mine elsewhere but I really like them. Of course they are quite young, being close to 7 months, but I find that the cockerels will crow 'round the clock'. It doesn't bother me because I live alone, far out and anyone.
 
"Roosters are good protectors." <<NOT>>

I'll never understand why folks think any cock is going to do anything that can actually protect a flock. Buckeye cocks are sizable birds and look very intimidating, perhaps to a human but a hungry predator would go through a whole flock of them (or any other breed) like cow-plops through a tin horn.
 
Oh...yes, there are some very nice bantams being produced. Excellent meal for one or two folks!!!
 
Thanks. Have been thinking of getting a few of these, but read reviews that they aren't great producers. I live in the Southeast, so get plenty of cold weather in the winter, but definitely more hot and humid weather. Love the idea of the heritage breeds.
 
Lots of folks write reviews who have at best, only seen pictures and red what some self
styled expert says, because they heard someone make a statement or they may have had two birds or their husbandry wasn't what it could be.

Naturally they do better in cooler climates but they do fine in hot weather if good natural shade and a supply of clean cool water is available.

By the same token, I have Turkens/NNs and I live in West Virginia. It was down to +3* this morning and it will get much colder later in the week. Asa matter of fact, I had most of these same NNs last winter when the temps went down to minus 40, actual temp...not wind chill effect and they did fine.

With any breed, It's all a matter of your husbandry skills and willingness to do the work to care for them.

A Polar Bear will freeze to death in the far North if they can't find food to keep them warm.
 
My Buckeye is tolerant of us and the dogs. I haven't seen her be aggressive. She is well behaved when I have to handle her.
 
Just curious, you say you have "heard" of buckeye roosters being nasty. What is your experience with them or has someone you've known had that experience? I would hesitate to label roosters from one breed as being nasty unless I personally had multiple experiences with nasty roosters in one breed and not from the same line.
Most of my life I have had chickens and the only breed of rooster I would label "nasty" are white leghorns and that is because as a child we NEVER had a decent leghorn rooster.
Much of my childhood I carried a staff (and didn't hesitate to use it. but that didn't deter the roosters. Finally my parents gave up and got rid of the entire breed and since them much fewer mean roosters of any breed.
 
I find your comment about Buckeyes being aggressive being COMPLETELY off-based. I breed and sell and show Buckeyes and have been doing so for 6 years. I have raised hundreds of them. I keep over 100 roosters in the same pasture in Summer and I have NEVER EVER been attacked and I have never been shown aggression by ANY of my Buckeyes!!! There are breeders who fail to breed for temperament, therefore producing aggressive birds. Aggression is NOT a typical trait of this breed, and one of the qualities of it is that they ARE CALM, NON-aggressive, easy to handle, and naturally friendly.
I can even go to the point of saying, I have had several who would come and "talk" to me while I do chores and handle birds, and that is FAR from aggressive.
 
I also agree Buckeyes are the MOST docile and non aggressive of any breed I have seen. Please cull any and all aggressive Buckeyes as that is definitely not a breed trait. I don't handle my birds for more than inspection and assessments. They are always very near and curious. I have never been flogged or chased or hunted by any Buckeye chicken.
 
I have to say, your review doesn't sound like it comes from someone with actual experience with Buckeyes.The first part reads like excerpts from a breed description. Then follow that up with you "heard" that the roosters are mean and nasty, then label them a mediocre breed.... HUUUUUM???? Have you actually ever been around a Buckeye, like in person? My Buckeyes are great! On the other hand I have a Buff Orpington roo that is as mean as I have ever seen. I have to use a livestock prod to back him down. I hatched him from an egg and handled him daily as a chick. But I don't go around bashing the breed even though I have had "actual experience" with1 bad bird from an otherwise docile breed.
 
I haven't had mine long and they are aggressive...breeders, but are very tractable around humans and so far, each other.

BantamFan4Life...do you just copy and paste?
 
Everyone, I have not raised Buckeyes myself, but I know people who raise them and I know a lot about the breed, so I left a review giving my knowledge of them. You probably already know this, but some breeds have a tendency of aggression, depending on the stock and their individual personalities. I didn't base the review off my opinions, nor something someone told me. This review was researched. On the last comment above, no, I did not copy and paste.
 
For my two cents, I think a more honest picture would be given if the people who wrote the reviews had actual hands on experience with what they are reviewing.
Anyone can do research and generalizations, but it is the actual working relationship, how what is being reviewed can vary from the norm. With living animals that can happen. With actual experience a reviewer can give variations in his experience.
Even, with that, there can be a wide range of reviews a prospective owner might take into consideration....Does the reviewer have a large or small flock? One or several breeds? Interaction with other breeds, etc. There are so many variations to take into consideration. Different breeds under different conditions are quite interesting.
If someone has no personal experience I think that should be stated.
 

Item information

Category
Chicken Breeds
Added by
Super Admin
Views
65,289
Watchers
5
Comments
70
Reviews
35
Last update
Rating
4.47 star(s) 38 ratings

More in Chicken Breeds

More from Super Admin

Share this item

Back
Top Bottom