Love what you said. I’m J.B. I did just what you did four years when we couldn’t fly. I wish I could send you some pictures of my birds. The ones I breed roll down after 8 weeks of flying. How can I stop that?
The mother to son breeding is a sex link breeding. You got the right idea but might just mix the sex of the babis up. The dun baby will be the hen and the cream/yellow baby will be the cock. The baby "girl" will get her dad's color which is blue and the baby "boy" will get colors from his mom and dad and since ash red > blue it'll be ash red carrying blue.
Hello from Australia, well explained mate, was so easy to follow ... my question though is how were these colors introduced into birmingham rollers in the first place? were rollers crossbred to other varieties that had these genes? Thanks.
@@therollerpigeonevolutionsm7763 yeah in sha Allah.. come to sri lanka 🇱🇰 we always welcome tourist 👍👍... and u can find lots of pigeon lover specially in colombo city 😁
Sir I have a question.. I seen some beautiful white tail pigeon😍,.. my question is do u know how to get a red pigeon with white tail?? from breeding.. and my 2nd question was do you have any white tail pigeon in your loft?? If u have can you show it to us.. love see different pigeon colour 😍 ❤
Hey Sam Smitty, I recently came across your RU-vid channel. I was trying to buy a pair of all white rollers. I live in Louisiana. Would you be interested in selling a pair? How much it cost me?
Great videos, just a point of correction because dilute is a sex linked recessive gene, dilute yellow hens only have one Z chromosome for a sex linked colour. In other words they can only be and show dilute yellow but will pass it onto their sons. A recessive red cock can however show recessive red but can also carry dilute " yellow" gene and pass onto his daughters. Yellows & creams can also be produced by dilute gene being introduced via the ash red route. Thus dilute of recessive red being recessive yellow and yellow/creams dilute of ash red series. Cream bar can only be produced via the ash red series as recessive red/yellow is epistatic to the pattern series, meaning it will cover over check and bar patterns that are underneath. Great videos keep them coming
@@quentinlee4005 if you make recessive yellows from recessive reds using the dilute gene, the recessive gene is epistatic to the pattern gene meaning it will mask over the bars or checks. If you make yellows or creams from ash red birds using the dilute gene, bars will show through if they carry the gene for the bar pattern. Ash red birds are completely different birds genetically from recessive red birds. So yes you can get cream bars but you must breed dilute onto ash red birds and not recessive red birds
You are not quite right. The hen you are calling cream is recessive yellow. She carries two autosomal chromosomes for recessive red and she has dilute on her only sex chromosome. I think @Adamarcher can tell you more. Good luck!