This is Rachel. If you haven’t already made her acquaintance, she’s something of a hen starlet on my Facebook page where she is featured daily in all her fluffy cuteness. Rachel is a bantam frizzled Cochin. Cochin is her breed, bantam describes her miniature size and frizzle describes her unusual feathers. Genetics cause frizzled feathers to grow out and curl away from the body instead of growing flat and smooth following the body contour. Frizzle is not a breed, it is a genetically programmed feather type.
Cochin is her breed, bantam describes her miniature size and frizzle describes her unusual feathers.FACTS ABOUT FRIZZLED CHICKENS:
- Frizzles are most commonly found in the following breeds: Polish, Cochin, Plymouth Rock, Japanese and Silkies (Silkie frizzles are referred to as Sizzles)
- Frizzled feathers curl out and away from the skin instead of laying flat against it.
- Frizzles cannot fly and may find it difficult to roost if the roosts are positioned too high above the floor.
Frizzled feathers provide less protection from the cold than smooth feathers as it is difficult to trap warm air against their bodies with backwards-facing feathers. Frizzled genes are dominant. A smooth-feathered bird bred to a frizzled bird will result in 25% of the chicks possessing frizzled feathers.
Bantam Cochin Frizzles Monica, Rachel & Phoebe at 6 weeks old.Breeding a frizzled bird to another frizzled bird is undesirable due to the chance that the mating may produce “curlies,” an over-frizzled bird with feathers that are weak, brittle and break easily. (think: chicken with a really bad perm)
White bantam Cochin chicks Female with frizzled feathers on left. Male on right.
Phoebe looks like a chrysanthemum! She is so pretty. :-)
i am looking for 2 to 3 frizzles for my in town flock i am having terrible results HELP!
She most likely is going through a molt, chickens do this for winter. They will molt then grow new ones
Go easy on the protein- it can cause digestive problems and interfere with the complete nutrition in their layer feed. I think you’ll find this article helpful: http://www.the-chicken-chic…
I have a Frizzle hen. She has had so many problems. She has lost many of her feathers and seems to be unable to grow them back. [I have been feeding her many high protein foods but it has not helped much. Is this a characteristic?