Showing posts with label Egg Shells. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Egg Shells. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Unraveling the Blues Old School


Our understanding of how this blue egg gene works is much farther along now but I still loved finding this in the archives of the archives this morning!

 Reginald Punnett (1933). Genetic studies in poultry: IX. The blue egg

Journal of Genetics 27 (3) : 465 - 470

https://web.archive.org/web/20161020042409/www-old.ias.ac.in/jarch/jgenet/27/465.pdf










Friday, December 13, 2013

Gorgeous Colors

We have had an amazingly colorful fall that just seems to go on and on......

The Pirate Egg Projects are on track.  The challenge now is sorting out which pullet is laying which egg and then making decisions as to which birds to carry forward into the 2014 breeding programs.

Chocolate anyone? We've had a bit of confusion over how chocolate genes (both dun and sex-linked!) have infiltrated different project lineages and what to do about it.  I can't say I'm hating the look but I am having to do some test hatching to figure out what the heck we've actually got going on.

I've decided this is actually Zerya's first egg!
Zorie lays long thin blue eggs;
 ZERYA lays the olive eggs.
Zelda's eggs look just like her mother Orchid's;
alas...not shiny but definitely white pores on a pastel mint shell.
The rumpless girls have identical blue eggs.
Love the shine!








   


These are just some of my favorite pictures from this fall.  There are many more on the pinterest account.


Thursday, August 1, 2013

Oona and Starry Night - rumpless, shiny blue egg layers

Oona and Starry Night are half-sisters.  Their momma, Rupa, is nearly rumpless. Their fathers are from a unique flock of birds thought to be composites of birds indigenous to South and Central America and the Pacific Isles. These girls are very small, slow to mature, and a bit more wild than a typical bantam. 
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Oona spent last winter as a house pet in our sun room so she got to "help" unwrap presents Christmas morning.  She has dark skin and wild pattern plumage.  Her stint as a house pet has given her a prima donna complex but typically she is exceptionally silent.


Star is a few months older than Oona and she stayed in the Aikiko Project House over the winter. She carries the mottling gene and has the tell tale white dots and white skin.  Her brother, Xeryus, also carries the mottling gene but he has dark skin.  He is equally rumpless.  



It took Oona and Star both almost a full year to start laying.  This is consistent with my experience with the mother, "Rupa" and sister "Cerci".  It is interesting to note that Rupa's eggs are a rather pale, matte blue with a slight green tinge. All of her daughters lay shiny blue eggs without a hint of green.  



These girls are part of the Aikiko Project but the project is paused until fall.  The Aikiko Project is a hatching eggs / genetics learning collaboration. Participants contribute information about their hatches, help puzzle out the genotypes of project birds, and guide project development.  The project group currently functions using facebook, ancestry.com, and photobucket.  A dedicated website is being developed for the fall.   

Friday, July 12, 2013

The Aikiko Project


The Aikiko Project was a counter top hatching eggs, chicken genetics learning collaboration for curious chickenistas (plus, those chicks are just pretty darn cute!).


March 2019 Life is as life goes.....   My Aikikos only live on in the many spin-off flocks people started by buying my hatching eggs, chicks, and birds.   Thank you to all who encouraged and supported the Aikiko Project.  -Alison
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July 12, 2013  The Aikiko Project is a hatching eggs / genetics learning collaboration. Participants contribute information about their hatches, help puzzle out the genotypes of project birds, and guide project development.  The project group currently functions using facebook, ancestry.com, and photobucket. A dedicated website is being developed for the fall.   













Thursday, June 13, 2013

Young Professor and the Willas



The Blue Wheaten Ameraucana hens (the Willas) are enjoying some time in the Rest & Respite Free Range flock. They seem to be quite happy so I'm going to hold off on segregating them with the purebred Blue Wheaten Ameraucana rooster (Will).


The Rest & Respite Flock protector, "Young Professor", is a purebred (but a non-standard color) Ameraucana with a pleasant temperament and excellent gentlemanly manners. He is much more consistent with the demeanor I need for my flock. Both his father and grandfather were superior flock protectors who the girls would rather follow than hide from.

My best guess-timate is that Young Professor is genetically a blue partridge/brown with multiple melanizing forces. Based on my genetics calculator tinkering I suspect the offspring will appear to be wheaten. The blue genetics mean there could be blue, black, or splash feathering.  (genetic code calculation)

   

The Rest and Respite Flock, June 2013