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Not quite how I would put it.I am unsure if anyone else has said this, so sorry if you have, but I will explain something. An Easter Egger is a chicken that is a mixed breed with Ameraucana genetics somewhere in their lineage, and they must carry the blue, green or pink egg gene.
That is good info. Thank you so much.They are both definitely female Easter Eggers.
I am unsure if anyone else has said this, so sorry if you have, but I will explain something. An Easter Egger is a chicken that is a mixed breed with Ameraucana genetics somewhere in their lineage, and they must carry the blue, green or pink egg gene. With Easter Eggers being so popular, not many people want Ameraucanas and they are becoming more rare and unseen as time passes. Hatcheries and feed stores have a trick to get more buyers: places like Tractor Supply, for example, may label their Easter Eggers as Americanas (notice the difference in wording from Ameraucana). This makes people think they are carrying the rare breed Ameraucana, which is spelled differently, and they are more likely to purchase them. This means that Easter Eggers and Americanas are the same thing, one is just the normal name (Easter Egger) and one is just a trick made up by hatcheries and feed stores (Americana). This trick should be illegal because it is false advertising, but they do it anyway.
I have seen this so many times and, sorry, I still do not believe it. The pink egg gene makes sense, but originally the only Easter Eggers being sold (back when Easter Eggers first started being a thing) came from Ameraucana lineage, so I believe it is wrong to change what they were first. That would make as much sense as suddenly announcing that Golden Comets could be a hybrid between a Barred Plymouth Rock and an Old English Game, instead of their actual parentage. I do not believe in changing things far from their original concept.Not quite how I would put it.
I would say that "Easter Eggers" are any chickens that lay blue or green eggs but do not belong to a recognized pure breed.
It doesn't matter whether they are descended from Araucanas, or Ameraucanas, or Cream Legbars, or directly from the original blue-layers that did not become any of those breeds. They are still "Easter Eggers" if they lay blue or green eggs.
As regards a "pink" egg gene, I disagree about there being any special pink egg gene that makes a bird count as an Easter Egger. Blue and green eggs have a specific gene (blue egg gene), that is not found in chickens who lay white or brown or "pink" eggs. So if we are just splitting them up by egg color, blue and green are Easter Eggers, white and brown and cream and pink and dark brown are not.
Hatcheries do usually say that their Easter Eggers will include a few that lay white or brown or pink eggs, but those are more like a mistake, not the special colors that most people are trying to get when they buy Easter Eggers.
The birds sold as "Americanas" are usually wanna-be-Ameraucana types, but they are definitely not the only kind of Easter Eggers.
When do you think Easter Eggers first started being a thing?I have seen this so many times and, sorry, I still do not believe it....originally the only Easter Eggers being sold (back when Easter Eggers first started being a thing) came from Ameraucana lineage, so I believe it is wrong to change what they were first. That would make as much sense as suddenly announcing that Golden Comets could be a hybrid between a Barred Plymouth Rock and an Old English Game, instead of their actual parentage. I do not believe in changing things far from their original concept.