Frizzled Easter Egger bantams

mamabear6810

Songster
May 23, 2021
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Hi!
I am wondering how to achieve a frizzled Easter Egger bantam! I have frizzled cochin bantams and EE bantams.
All are babies but I discovered frizzled EE is a thing today and wondering if I will be able to create them myself.
Thanks for any help!!
 
Just cross a frizzled Cochin with an Easter Egger, and about half the chicks should come out frizzled and the other half not-frizzled.

If you use a Cochin male and an Easter Egger female, you can make sure the mother lays colored (blue or green) eggs. If she lays colored eggs, you can expect at least half of her daughters to also lay colored eggs. (An Easter Egger father can also pass on the gene for colored eggs, but you have no way to tell whether he actually carries that gene or not, until his daughters grow up. With a hen, you can be sure she has at least one copy of the blue egg gene if she herself lays blue or green eggs.)

The chicks will probably have feathered feet because of the Cochin parent, and if the Easter Egger has muffs (puffy cheeks) the chicks may have those as well.

If you want to have more in later generations, cross a frizzled part-EE back to EEs, and you should keep getting Easter Eggers with some being frizzled. Crossing the part-EEs back to Cochin will give you at least half brown-eggers instead of colored-eggers.
 
Just cross a frizzled Cochin with an Easter Egger, and about half the chicks should come out frizzled and the other half not-frizzled.

If you use a Cochin male and an Easter Egger female, you can make sure the mother lays colored (blue or green) eggs. If she lays colored eggs, you can expect at least half of her daughters to also lay colored eggs. (An Easter Egger father can also pass on the gene for colored eggs, but you have no way to tell whether he actually carries that gene or not, until his daughters grow up. With a hen, you can be sure she has at least one copy of the blue egg gene if she herself lays blue or green eggs.)

The chicks will probably have feathered feet because of the Cochin parent, and if the Easter Egger has muffs (puffy cheeks) the chicks may have those as well.

If you want to have more in later generations, cross a frizzled part-EE back to EEs, and you should keep getting Easter Eggers with some being frizzled. Crossing the part-EEs back to Cochin will give you at least half brown-eggers instead of colored-eggers.
Yay! Thank you! My 2 favorite things are frizzled chickens and easter eggers! Cant wait till theyre old enough to breed!
 
I agree with @NatJ - Use a frizzled cochin and an easter egger (or easter egger bantam, if you have that. But cochins are also bantam, so it would make the outcome bantam sized)
OP mentioned Cochin Bantams and Easter Egger Bantams, so I assumed the offspring would all be bantams, but I didn't bother saying "bantam" every time I mentioned them (slight laziness on my part.)
 

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