I have a bantam chicken that I've had with a group of pheasants sitting on her eggs right now hoping things will work out and I'll have some hybrids too!
Jacob, it's nice of you to keep up with these hybrid pheasants. When others do what I can't do, I get even more excited to do something about it. I'm currently trying to get my own kind of cross. If you get a chance to get a chick from this hybrid rooster, I'm thinking of adding pheasant genes to this new breed. I hope you understood what I wrote. My English grammar is not good.
Cool idea, but unfortunately, it's not possible. Since they are from two different families (the chicken and pheasant) the chick would not be fertile and therefore not create any offspring. You cannot breed the hybrids to two generations, although pheasants and peafowl should create viable offspring. If you can, give that a try
@@thomasborg6341 I don't think anything is impossible. I crossed a guinea fowl and an ameraucana rooster last year and had the chance to get chicks. 7 chicks hatched from 12 eggs. Only one of the hatched chicks survived. Their cause of death was that they were attacked by a weasel. The only remaining hybrid chick grew up and mated with a rooster in my mixed chicken coop, that hybrid hen laid an egg and died while the chick was in the egg. Then the hybrid chicken was cut into pieces in a falcon attack.In short, it's not completely impossible. Even though I got a lot of deaths in this result, I didn't want to give up, so I wanted to push the limits.In my opinion, if chicks are obtained from a hybrid hen from a guinea fowl and an ameraucana rooster, the pheasant also has a chance in this regard.By the way, my grammar is not good so I apologize if I used the wrong sentence.
@@thomasborg6341 Crossing pheasants and peacocks can cost me dearly. I'll get back to you if I manage to cross peacocks. but I'm not working at the moment and I don't have money to spend on it. I hardly take care of my chickens. Many of my friends have cut off their ties to chickens because wheat prices have increased. People should sweat in the jobs they love.
I have a bantam chicken that I've had with a group of pheasants sitting on her eggs right now hoping things will work out and I'll have some hybrids too!
Good luck!
Did it work?
@@carterrose2444 no
Jacob, it's nice of you to keep up with these hybrid pheasants. When others do what I can't do, I get even more excited to do something about it. I'm currently trying to get my own kind of cross. If you get a chance to get a chick from this hybrid rooster, I'm thinking of adding pheasant genes to this new breed. I hope you understood what I wrote. My English grammar is not good.
Cool idea, but unfortunately, it's not possible. Since they are from two different families (the chicken and pheasant) the chick would not be fertile and therefore not create any offspring. You cannot breed the hybrids to two generations, although pheasants and peafowl should create viable offspring. If you can, give that a try
@@thomasborg6341 *Are you right*
@@thomasborg6341 I don't think anything is impossible. I crossed a guinea fowl and an ameraucana rooster last year and had the chance to get chicks. 7 chicks hatched from 12 eggs. Only one of the hatched chicks survived. Their cause of death was that they were attacked by a weasel. The only remaining hybrid chick grew up and mated with a rooster in my mixed chicken coop, that hybrid hen laid an egg and died while the chick was in the egg. Then the hybrid chicken was cut into pieces in a falcon attack.In short, it's not completely impossible. Even though I got a lot of deaths in this result, I didn't want to give up, so I wanted to push the limits.In my opinion, if chicks are obtained from a hybrid hen from a guinea fowl and an ameraucana rooster, the pheasant also has a chance in this regard.By the way, my grammar is not good so I apologize if I used the wrong sentence.
@@thomasborg6341 Crossing pheasants and peacocks can cost me dearly. I'll get back to you if I manage to cross peacocks. but I'm not working at the moment and I don't have money to spend on it. I hardly take care of my chickens.
Many of my friends have cut off their ties to chickens because wheat prices have increased. People should sweat in the jobs they love.
@@thomasborg6341 chickens are actually in the pheasant family, that includes turkeys, quail, peacocks etc.
Awesome
R u my new reference
I need one to buy
Hey, Jacob. Did any of them ever grow spurs? None of mine ever did.
I have four with spurs
@@jacob.samuel. oh wow!!! I'd love to see!
Have the hybrid females already laid eggs?
These pheasant hens are laying
@@jacob.samuel. these females are hybrids or common pheasants
Yummy 😋