- Dec 23, 2014
- 51
- 0
- 41
IS THERE A DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE TWO AND IF SO PLEASE EXPLAIN. I HAVE TWO RED HENS THAT I KNOW ARENT RIR s and it really doesn't matter either way but I was just wondering. Thanks in advance
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Not 100% there not but they dont have that dark mahogany that I see everywhere online. Ill try and get some pictures up as soon as I can
IS THERE A DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE TWO AND IF SO PLEASE EXPLAIN. I HAVE TWO RED HENS THAT I KNOW ARENT RIR s and it really doesn't matter either way but I was just wondering. Thanks in advance
About the silver gene in Red Sex-Links, I think I'm beginning to understand about it. My 4-H Manual states the Red Sex-Link is a cross between Rhode Island Red cock and White Leghorn hen. Obviously, this is not the only cross. and so I'm wondering if there is a silver gene Leghorn (Columbian?). Please help me verify this.Red Sex Links are hybrids produced by crossing a red gene rooster (RIR, NH, or Production Red) with a silver gene hen (RIW, SLW, Delaware, Light Sussex, or sometimes a silver factor WR). The offspring can be sexed by color from hatching (males are whitish, females are reddish), and they are egg laying machines, outlaying either parent breed. It's one of the interesting quirks of hybridization. Red Sex Links will not breed true. The offspring of Red Sex Links will simply be mixed breeds (mutt birds) and cannot be sexed by color.
Production Reds are produced by crossing two red gene parents (whether or not they are hybrids depends on whose defining hybrid and how it's defined). Production Reds will be breed true; the offspring will be a red gene bird like the parents and cannot be sexed by color at hatching (unlike Red Sex Links). Production Reds are excellent layers although not usually quite the egg laying machines that Red Sex Links are, however the advantage in Production Reds over Red Sex Links is that two Production Reds bred together will produce Production Red offspring.
About the silver gene in Red Sex-Links, I think I'm beginning to understand about it. My 4-H Manual states the Red Sex-Link is a cross between Rhode Island Red cock and White Leghorn hen. Obviously, this is not the only cross. and so I'm wondering if there is a silver gene Leghorn (Columbian?). Please help me verify this.
Glad to have read your explanation; it explains a lot. Explains why the "RIR's" I thought I was getting from Southern States are mostly a washed-out red with a little white & my rooster is 99% white. I'll give 'em their due, though; they are definitely egg-laying machines.Right on. Hatchery RIR's will not have that deep mahogany color that the heritage birds have.