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Good to know. I'll have to look into that.The extra red is from Autosomal Red.
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Good to know. I'll have to look into that.The extra red is from Autosomal Red.
You're welcome. Still learning about that gene.I
Good to know. I'll have to look into that.
I had a red wheaten too.My pullet went through quite a metamorphosis over time, and I had thought that she was a 'he' because there was so much red across the shoulders (compared to a male in pic here), looking into that I discovered the wheaten gene. I learn more every day![]()
Interesting. The recognized colors/patterns of Bruges leads me to believe there should not be wheaten? I don't know enough about color genetics though to be sure.I had a red wheaten too.
Mahogany and duckwing from the Welsummer, and Wheaten from the Ameraucana.
Now I hatched the same thing but the parents were a Buckeye and a blue EE carrying duckwing.
Good plan!I just realized that if my birchen roo is carrying wheaten, and the cross with duck wing produced blacks and duckwing wheaten splits, the blacks would be birchen and duckwing, so instead of using the offspring that appeared duckwing, I can breed the black (the birchen x duckwing) back to my duckwing, thereby getting to homozygous duckwing and bypassing/eliminating the wheaten out of my duckwing. This seems like the best path to take. Thanks for all the help and advice, much appreciated.