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Easter Eggers and Olive Eggers

Many people raise chickens to enjoy healthy eggs. I know that’s what got us started. And even more fun is to have a colorful egg basket—without dying!

Many first-time chicken keepers are unaware that different breeds of chickens lay different colored eggs. Without any dyeing, you can have a colorful Easter basket year round! Our grandchildren love to identify the breeds that their breakfast eggs came from by the colors.

At Storybook Farm, we work hard on mating our heritage breed cocks and hens to produce birds better than they are, following the APA Standard of Perfection (SOP). But, there’s a time to get less serious and just have fun! We happen to have heritage breeds that lay bluish eggs, dark chocolate eggs, and deep tan eggs. From these breeds, one can cross them to get a hen that will lay what are commonly called “Easter eggs” and “olive eggs.” The cross-bred hens are correspondingly called “Easter Eggers” and “Olive Eggers.” The reason that breeding these birds is “not serious” is because Easter Eggers (EEs) and Olive Eggers (OEs) are not recognized as breeds by the APA. But, it sure is fun to have those different colored eggs in your basket each week!

So, what breeds do you combine to get Easter and olive egg colors? For OEs, you need a breed that gives dark brown eggs: Marans and Welsummers are popular choices for this element. And you need a breed that lays a blue, or blue green egg: most often, and Ameraucana. For EEs, you want to start with a tan egg (many breeds lay this kind), and cross it with a blue or blue green egg. The resulting color will be more of a true green than an olive color.

It does not matter if the cock or the hen are of the two breeds you are mixing. You can put an Ameraucana cock over a Marans hen, or vice versa. The resulting hens from these interbreeding can be quite lovely. They almost always have cute muffs around their faces (from their Ameraucana genes) and their feather colors can be all over the place. And, you can develop egg colors still further by breeding successive generations of mixed breeds. The chart at the left gives you ideas of how they can develop, as does the photo below.

Here at Storybook Farm, we have Black Copper Marans (who lay dark brown eggs), Ameraucanas (who lay the blue eggs), and Light Sussex, who lay differing tan colored eggs. (See a sample of our eggs in the photo at the start of this article.)

If you are interested in purchasing either hatching eggs or chicks, we can accommodate you with a special order. Please see our Shop for details on orders of this kind.

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Things to Consider When Buying Your First Chicks

When thinking about purchasing chicks for your flock, you have a range of options. This post is mostly intended to serve first-time chick buyers with information you can use as you make your buying decision.

Narrow Down Your Options

As you surf the Internet, you’re going to find a range of options — and prices — for day-old chicks. Here are some questions and topics that can help you winnow these options. If you are brand new to chickens, the best advice I can give you is to join an online group, like www.backyardchickens.com. On this forum you can ask many questions of experienced chicken keepers who are passionate about their birds, and even read reviews about different breeds.

  1. Your first decision, of course, is about the breed of chicken you want to buy. There are literally hundreds of breeds, because down through the ages, chickens (like dogs) have been selectively bred for different purposes. Some breeders were looking for the most eggs possible per hen. Others wanted the meatiest chickens possible. Some bred for white skins, and others for yellow, feeling that table birds looked better with one or the other. Some chickens were bred for certain colors of eggs. And, more recently, chickens have been bred smaller and smaller to produce miniature versions of larger fowl breeds. These are the bantams. So, consider why you are buying your chickens. What jobs are they to perform? Will they provide pure pleasure as you watch their endearing antics, or as they sit on your lap? Will they provide eggs, or meat (or both) for your table? Will you breed them? Do you want a mixed flock, or only one breed to start?
  2. Also consider your limits. Do local ordinances allow you to keep roosters? How many chickens are you allowed to keep? (You can keep more bantams than large fowls in the same amount of space.) How big a coop will you have? Chicken math, as we call it, offers the guideline that you should provide at least 2 square feet of floor space in your coop, with and additional 4 square feet of run space. Before you buy any chicks, have their housing totally ready to receive them, and do recognize that chicken keeping is addictive: think about providing more space than you think you’ll initially use.
  3. Are you interested in breeding chickens? A major positive movement among backyard poultry keepers has been the preservation — and, in some cases, the rescue — of heritage breeds that were once the mainstay of the American poultry industry but have been in danger of extinction, and thus being lost forever. Do consider joining others in preserving these beautiful birds!

About the Costs of Chicks

Chick prices (for any chosen breed) will vary widely, and the first-time buyer might wonder why this is so. Here are some factors that go into pricing baby chicks:

First, there is a great divide between chicks from large hatcheries and those from smaller, private breeders. Here are reasons why.

Large Hatcheries

Typical Hatchery Breeding

As with most sectors of agriculture and farming today, big hatcheries are big business. Their methods tend to lead to lower quality birds and (in some) inhumane conditions. Because they handle large numbers of chicks, and serve larger retail chains that sell the spring chicks you may have seen in stores, their breeding and sales practices are modified for the greatest possible profit at the lowest possible costs. I want to be careful here: I am not condemning all large hatcheries wholesale, but if you’re interested in details (some are disturbing) you can read these two articles:

Chicks from larger hatcheries are thus not necessarily the healthiest or best looking representative of a given breed of chickens. They may be compared to the puppy mills of the dog world, with which reputation and cautions you may already be familiar.

Private Breeders

Smaller, private breeders (such as ourselves) take the time and absorb the labor that selective breeding of parent stocks require. Often these breeders seek to improve the breeds they keep (some with an eye towards winning prizes at chicken shows—which is a world unto itself that you may never have dreamed existed)! As the Mother Earth article states above, most smaller breeders are looking to improve not only breed types, but their health, overall productivity (in whatever sphere that is, whether for meat or eggs or foraging or broodiness, or a combination of these), etc.

Juvenile French Black Copper Marans

In order to make selections for breeding, private breeders must hatch and raise hundreds of chicks. Why? Serious breeders typically keep for the next generation’s breeding only 1/10 of hens hatched and 1/100 of roosters hatched. Year by year, these breeders raise many, many chicks to maturity so that they can select only the finest, and pair them with mates that promote the qualities in the breed that they are looking to improve or sustain. In raising so many birds, breeder incur costs: feed, housing, and labor. Typically, too, the conditions under which birds are raised are more natural to the birds, and humane.

In Summary

So, the pure economics of your choice are these: you will typically get more vigorous, healthier, more beautiful, and more productive stock from private breeders than you will from larger hatcheries, but it will cost you more initially.

One more consideration: as is true when we “buy American”, buying from private breeders supports the work (and practices) of private breeders, ensuring the ongoing efforts to raise rare breeds and/or healthier, more productive stock.

Finding Private Breeders

Once you have narrowed down your choice of breeds, and decided to go the route of private breeders, there are several ways to find private breeders.

  • Best, probably, is to find the national organization for that breed (all heritage breeds have these). Such organizations will typically have a breeder’s directory or a Facebook group (or both) where you can connect with top breeders and purchase stock.
  • Another approach is to simply Google your breed of choice + “for sale” and see which websites come up.

Note that the best breeders know their bloodlines! Typically, in their descriptions of the chicks they offer, they will name those lines. This is a sure indication that you are getting top birds within the given breed.

A Word About Shipping Costs

Common Shipping Crate

In purchasing chicks from private breeders, don’t be thrown by shipping costs. The only game in town for all of us is the USPS, and their rates are high.

Most breeders simply charge what it actually costs them: often a flat rate of $50/shipment to ensure a speedy delivery and healthy chicks on arrival. You may be able to find a breeder near enough to you to pick up your stock personally, so again, use the above resources to search out all your options, but remember: in buying chicks, you do get what you pay for.

Remember…

You are making an investment in livestock: you’ll be housing, feeding, eating the eggs from, and be concerned about the health of the chicks you purchase for years to come once they’re in your care.

For all that they give us, we think it’s well worth it to purchase the best stock we can find. Most private breeders are committed to offering you that stock. Here at Storybook Farm, we are one such private breeder working to provide such quality chickens for you.