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I know, Draye, pretty darn nice looking baby roo, isn't he?![]()
Send him my way if you decide not to keep him,lol!!!!!!!!!!!!! He'd go great with my mottled bird, I now think that it is a she.
Only if I were closer to Arizona.
Materials are expensive here also. I used a dog kennel pen the last time I needed a pen. Even with buying the netting to go over the top and 2 8" privacy fence panels I spent less than $400.00.I know, Draye, pretty darn nice looking baby roo, isn't he?
If I have room I'll do a breeder pen of NN's and send you eggs. We really need to get the new coop built. In a perfect world I'd have 4 breeder pens plus a chick grow-out pen or two, and could do more silly stuff like NN's and other side projects. But I keep putting it off, having the coop re-done, despite the fact my guy's been offering to build it, because I need to cough up the money for materials.
I think it's going to cost $600-$1000 in materials to make four stalls of breeder pens. Each pen would probably be a roomy 6 x 16 feet. Big enough to comfortably hold up to 10-12 chickens in each pen, although even 30 adults gave me more eggs than I could hatch last season! (Even with the giant 300 egg incubator, I was still selling hatching eggs on the side. LOL.) So it would probably be more like 5-8 hens in each pen with a rooster.
Most of my pens right now are chain link with shade stuff draped over the sides. But we had kids scale the chain link and steal chicks, and even though the bottom is covered with chicken wire, there were a few gaps, so when the kids set loose the chicks while stealing them, about half escaped and were eaten by my boyfriend dog (who reluctantly leaves adults alone but will chomp baby chicks at a moment's notice.)Materials are expensive here also. I used a dog kennel pen the last time I needed a pen. Even with buying the netting to go over the top and 2 8" privacy fence panels I spent less than $400.00.
I will keep you posted on the NN's. Right now it looks like I have a ton of hens, like 6 or 7 total, but that seems odd. (Two roos and seven hens? I am never THAT lucky.) I suspect that a couple might be "sneaky" smaller roos. I will sell some of the extras if I do have that many hens, (I was going to post extras on Craigslist) but you would have to come up to Phoenix to get them!Hey Sommer since I have so many NN if you want me to work on a pen with them I will. Please let me know when you decide to sell those NN even the roo because I am interested. I have 14 NN now. My fav breed and I was planning on breeding my white roo to a Aloha hen...
You have some fun combos and plenty to work with.Hello all,
I recently picked up a couple of great NH cockerels to add to my flock to replace a NH roo I lost and in the process I was introduced to this project. After looking at much of the information, I discovered I have a flock that might have something to contribute. I am curious to know if anyone has used the Ancona breed to add the mottling gene? I currently own some, and upon reviewing their background, it seems they also come in red in Australia, which would indicate that while they are black based, they are able to take on the red coloration. In fact, the red version looks like some of the aloha chickens on the web, at least to me. Another bird that might add some color is the buttercup. I used to own a couple, but don't currently. I might have to consider adding them back to the flock. If I remember correctly their comb is recessive so the only problem might be the slate legs, and the NH factor should improve their laying deficit.
What I have to work with currently would be NH roos (from a project location, one of which appears to have some speckling), over ancona, buff & partridge chanteclers (great winter layers), NH, and a couple of EEs (including a partridge roo). After reading some about the project, I plan to pen my RIR with my buff orp to get some offspring there to work with also. Luckily I read that was a good combo, as he was on the cull list for being such a pain, but in a pen he can't harass everyone.
Does anyone have comments or suggestions on this combination?
You have some fun combos and plenty to work with.
I would say that the EE's and the Chanteclers will have you fighting the Pea Comb gene for years. And the EE'ers often have gray legs, that has proven very challenging to breed out. You would be fighting those genes for a while.
The Ancona body shape looks good. Nice upright combs, yellow legs, long flowy tail. You will get really dark chicks for quite a while but if you hatch a TON of chicks, and pick out the lightest ones with the most red color, eventually you will get through it. But the Anconas do not have a lot of white spotting, so your strain would probably look a bit subdued.
I would say the best best would be to use the Ancona X NHR's and avoid the EE'ers and Buff Chanteclers. (The solid Buff color has been resistant to spotting for some reason.) You could bring in the Partridge Chanteclers if you like, for size and laying ability. Just trying to add spots to this mix and get rid of pea combs and black color would keep you busy for 2-3 years before you'd even have to think about buying a new breed of chicken, LOL.
But if you stuck with it, and culled away all the too-dark, pea combed babies and kept everything with spots, eventually you'd end up with some brown big hens with small white spots. Probably have some nice sized hens that were very good layers. That's not a bad thing regardless of color.
Then I'd be able to send you some eggs from a really flashy Aloha pen, and that would be it! Add an Aloha roo to the mix once you go that far, and you'd have your own really nice unique Aloha strain of practical, spotted layers, that you could share or sell in your local community.
I So absolutely, you could do this, using what you have now. Just takes time, patience, and a lot of hatching of peeps. LOL