Showing posts with label bantam cochins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bantam cochins. Show all posts

Monday, November 9, 2015

Frizzles & Sizzles



 My paint Sizzle rooster and a bantam white cochin hen. My rooster is the offspring of a Paint Silkie rooster and bantam white cochin hen. I like the way he looks and he is the head honcho of my bantam flock of sizzles.
 He knows he's handsome and struts his stuff proudly.
 This is one of my Paint Silkie hens. She's only a few months old here. Her sire was a Paint Silkie and her mama was a white Silkie I bought from Murray MacMurray hatchery, so I don't know more about her ( mama ) than that she is a white Silkie. I am still reading up and learning about 'paint' genetics but the breeding of the rooster and several white Silkie hens has produced quite a few paints for me and I am happy with them thus far. ( Going to keep the black hen from this crossing to see what she hatched out after being bred to her paint half-brother.)
 Here is one of my white bantam frizzled cochins. She is a good mama and hatched a passel of little paint sizzles. I am having so much fun with these cute chickens !  (MY Sizzles are chickens I get from hatching eggs produced by the breeding of my Silkies with Bantam Frizzled Cochins.)
 Mama frizzle with her chicks.
 Look at this crazy Sizzle. She has a few spots and wacky feathers. Love her !
I am learning a lot raising these chickens . I am set on producing Sizzles with spots ( paint) and Silkie skin coloring, blue / black. I have a few that already fit this description. My next project in the poultry pens will be to evaluate all my Silkies and Sizzles and narrow my flock down to what I want to keep and breed. Always something to do in the poultry pens !

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Paint Sizzles ~ I Hope !

Sizzle chicks are hatching ! Yesterday morning I checked under this frizzled white bantam cochin to discover the first egg of her clutch had hatched. A tiny still wet from the egg chick was under her, and she was very angry with me for disturbing her and the chick.

I am kind of excited about these chicks because they are the chicks from her breeding to my Paint Silkie rooster. The next few days will tell , will I have Paint Sizzles or not ?

Monday, April 29, 2013

Mr. Fancy Pants

 This is Mr. Fancy Pants. He is a Sizzle. That means one of his parents was a Silkie chicken, and the other a Bantam Frizzled White Cochin. He is a sight to behold! As I said in an earlier post, he might be frilly, but he is all rooster.
 This is one of his gals and he watches over her protectively as she scratches and pecks for bugs and worms. He gets very excited if another rooster approaches her.
 Isn't she pretty? I often think these chickens are the poodles of the chicken world.
 Mr. Fancy Pants also has some Silkie girlfriends.
 Here he is with 2 of them.
 The chickens are clucking busybodies too. They love to line up near the sheep water trough to see what's goin' on over ( or under) the fence. The sheep like to gawk at the chickens too.

Boy, when you're feeling down, or need some entertainment, nothing beats watching the antics of a happy flock of chickens, or sheep. Mr. Fancy Pants and his gals make watching my chickens even more fun !

Friday, January 4, 2013

Ice Water For the Chickens

               This is my flock of bantams hatched out this past August by some very industrious & broody hens.The black chickens are purebred Bantam Cochins , unfortunately most of them are roosters. They sleep overnight in an old shed, then during the day I let them out in the fenced in area in the back of our home. 
The other day the water in the bucket had frozen overnight and was ice. It was fun to watch the chickens head for the water, then perch on top of the ice while seeking the melted spots.I did add some hot water on top to melt the ice a little.
The white chickens are Silkie & Bantam White Cochin crosses, and again, these are mostly roosters. So far this arrangement has worked out. They sleep in the shed, then get out during the day to browse, peck at things, play, fluff themselves in the loose soil ( when it is not frozen) then they return to the lighted  shed for the evening.
It is important to remember to keep your chickens supplied with plenty of water during freezing temperatures.I usually find myself taking buckets of hot water out to my chickens , and they love it.

All last spring & summer, I added apple cider vinegar to the poultry water. I read that it helps poultry in many ways. Helping prevent coccidiosis is among the supposed benefits. If you show your poultry, adding vinegar ( 1 Tablespoon per gallon) to their water at home will allow you to add it to the water in their show cages, making it familiar and a boost to their health during the stress of showing, where often the poultry are there for a few days.

Remember, water is very, very important in the production of eggs, and chickens left for long periods of time without water will stop laying, and even die,besides, who wants to deprive their chickens of a long tall drink of water anyway? "Water makes up a large portion of the hen's body and is a major constituent of the egg. Water helps to soften the feed and aids in its digestion, absorption and assimilation.If hens are deprived of water for only a short time, egg production will suffer." Raising Poultry The Modern Way by Leonard Mercia

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Cochins

                     The Chinese Shanghai fowl came to England and America in 1845.  The name of this Asiatic breed was later changed to Cochin.  The earliest were more or less buff in color.  Its striking appearance, due to great size and profuse soft feathering, distinguished it from all other breeds at the early period. Cochins created a sensation in England, resulting in a great boom for the "Cochin   China," as it was called in the days of "Cochin craze."
 In England Cochins  are called Pekins ,  Cochins come in bantam and standard both make excellent pets  there also good for meat and eggs and come in many colors including Buff, Blue, White , Black,   Splash, Lemon Blue, and many more . there are also frizzled Cochins. Cochins are also the second most popular bantam breed after the Old English game. Info above is from the   American Standard of Perfection.

                                      This is my Grandmas flock of Cochin bantams which include Black, Barred, and Red Cochins.                                    
                This is a photo of her frizzled white Cochins.

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Tribbles!

My tribbles.
See? This is what they look like from above. Little fluffy balls. They chirrup and seem to purr as they scratch the pen floor litter, and as they perch with their mama hen in the evening. What's not to like about tribbles? ( O.K. They are Bantam White Cochins, frizzled) To see more about them click here.*

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Broody Poultry

There are a lot of broody poultry here at our place. This time of year broodiness seems to be the name of the game as far as my chickens, ducks, doves, & turkeys are concerned.
 The end result of broody hens that have been successful is always a delight!To see more about the broodiness going on around here check out this post on my other blog.*Spot On Cedar Pond