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fat brown hen
Songster
- Jun 12, 2022
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I had white leghorns at the beginning, but that color turned to barred after a single generation of admixture. I also had some wheaten hens that I tried to reproduce, but their offspring always came out brown.If you only keep one or two roosters at a time, they have a very big effect on what color genes are in all the later generations. The hatcheries are probably working with a larger flock size, so this effect would be reduced. Reading about "genetic drift" might give a better explanation, if my way of putting it isn't helping. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genetic_drift (I know that reading explanations from different people is helpful to me if I have trouble understanding something.)
What other colors did you have, that disappeared? You may have lost a few dominant genes. Once a dominant gene is gone from your flock, it will never re-appear unless you re-introduce it. From your description, it sounds like you do not have Silver (a dominant gene that turns brown/red/gold into white) or Dominant White (turns black into white) or Blue (turns black into blue or splash), all of which were definitely present in some Whiting True Blues that I got from McMurray hatchery.
Your info is helpful. I have a full order of 15 WTBs, but only plan to keep half and sell the rest. I suppose that if I want to maintain color diversity within my own flock, I should keep any chicks that are white or blue, correct?
Here is a sample from a batch I hatched last year. The eggs were collected from multiple hens, and there were 3 roosters at the time. The one on the bottom right has some white spots, which is the only remnant from the leghorns I had long ago.