I had assumed that the cocks I got last year were green cinn/ino but after this years breeding all the females should have been cinnamon green or cinnamon Lutino, I only bred one hen and it was a normal lutino hen so I'm back to the drawing board and still not sure what the cocks are because they clearly arnt cinnamon otherwise the hen would be a cinnamon ino. Will wait to this breeding season to know for sure but just after some other suggestions on what it could possibly be.
http://www.flickr.com/x/t/0091009/photo ... 768540704/
Not cinnamon
Moderator: Mods
Re: Not cinnamon
From what I've heard young cinnamon-ino birds start out like normal ino and get some green colour later on. I'm not an expert on them, though.
Re: Not cinnamon
Could you post a picture of your lutino youngster
Re: Not cinnamon
What colour was the hen you paired with your cinnamon/ino cock
Re: Not cinnamon
Ohk I will check it again next moult, at the moment it doesn't appear to have any cinnamon whatsoever.
Attached is a photo of the young hen with the mother.
http://www.flickr.com/x/t/0093009/photo ... 877780744/
Attached is a photo of the young hen with the mother.
http://www.flickr.com/x/t/0093009/photo ... 877780744/
Re: Not cinnamon
pair the cock to a Cinnamon hen this season
Re: Not cinnamon
To me that male is a cinnamon.
So the young has to be Cinnamon-Ino
The central tail feather is lighter and if my eyes don't fool me the young has a paler yellow as opposed to a strong yellow in an INO
Show Todd on FB the young chick, he is into Cinnamon.
I'm an Explorer
10% luck, 20% skill, 15% concentrated power of will, 50% pleasure, 5% pain$ and a 100% reason ..I just gotta know
10% luck, 20% skill, 15% concentrated power of will, 50% pleasure, 5% pain$ and a 100% reason ..I just gotta know