they have a ton of white on them. Now that they are our in the run they are staring to grow. yay.Look at all the white on those chicks! So promising!
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they have a ton of white on them. Now that they are our in the run they are staring to grow. yay.Look at all the white on those chicks! So promising!
I'm guessing you were gone "down under" to visit family?So this afternoon I checked on the forum and on seeing the Aloha thread, had the horrible thought that I had not seen any of my Alohas when I was out there, so I went to check on them and this time realized I had three of the "BSL pullets". Aha!!! They are the Alohas, all grown up!!! Well, not grown exactly, but not fuzzy chicks any more. They are mostly black, with a lot of gold around the neck, just like a BSL pullet, but one of them has a lot of white spots on the chest as well.
Whew. Glad they have survived my absence and continued to grow while I was gone. I'll try to get pics of them here in the next day or two and post them for you.
I would say all are pullets. I have a Partridge colored hen (Naked Neck) that as a chick had those light mottling (white) on her, and when she molted she retained the spots. Look at what I got out of her:Well, I finally remembered to take my camera out and get pics a few days ago and today I finally remembered to download them to my computer so I can post them. I tell ya, it is a slow process when you leave me in charge…..
All three look the same as far as gender, which is not good news. I had a fourth that was a week or two younger. Unfortunately when it was a week or two old, it squeezed into a pen where a hen had just hatched a chick and was in over-protective mode and she maimed it so badly that I had to cull it. My luck, it was whichever gender these are not so I would have had a nice little quad.
Two of them look just like this (these pics were of the same chick but both look so alike I couldn't tell you which one it was now):
See what I mean that they look a lot like black sexlink pullets?
And the third has a lot of white speckling on its chest. It wouldn't turn and face me to get a good shot of the chest but I got it from both sides and in both you can see the white.
Now, given that they were 9 weeks old when these pics were taken, what would you guess as far as gender? I'm leaning towards pullets. They do have a little comb and wattle but since their mothers were leghorns, I'm not surprised about that. However given that their mother's were leghorns, their combs are not very big yet which is why I think pullets - I'm guessing cockerels out of leghorn mothers would have bigger combs than this by 9 weeks. What do you think? Whichever they are, it is disappointing that they all appear to be the same gender. I guess I will have to separate out the NH rooster and leghorn hens again and hope for a better hatch next time. Those exchequers sure were slow to start laying and get consistent but I will say that now they've got the hang of things, they are doing much better in that department so it shouldn't be difficult to collect an incubator full of eggs this time. I even saw the rooster voluntarily mate one of them the other day, which I'd never seen before.
Sorry….I forget not everyone can keep track of what sub-projects each person is working on but knew Sommer would know what I was talking about.I would say all are pullets. I have a Partridge colored hen (Naked Neck) that as a chick had those light mottling (white) on her, and when she molted she retained the spots. Look at what I got out of her: , a tricolored mottled bab, I think this one is a pullet.