Although they are technically passerines, canaries tend to be managed uniquely, so here is a forum just for them!
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Smurf
- Sisal Slave

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by Smurf » Wed Apr 16, 2014 1:58 pm
First 2 canary fledgling of the year now weaned ( age 5 weeks )
Mum
Dad
Chick 1
Chick 2
Anyone know is it normal for young dominant white canaries not to show yellow on flights and for fawns to show a fair bit of yellow ?
Padraic

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Ginene
- Molting

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by Ginene » Wed Apr 16, 2014 2:02 pm
Congrats
Smurf!!! Beautiful Family!!!

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saulosirds
- Flirty Bird

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by saulosirds » Wed Apr 16, 2014 6:58 pm
Friend of mine breeds these here in the states. Not a very common bird over here I believe, but could be wrong. Unfortunately I don't know anything about them but congrats on your breeding success.
Rob
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Mexicancanary
- Callow Courter

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by Mexicancanary » Tue Apr 29, 2014 9:52 pm
Beautiful baby chicks, congratulations.

Linda..Canary Enthusiast (16 lovely canaries+)
Lilac Front Parrot, Scarlet
Adopted Cats...Bella, Ronny, Judah, Horatio, Lucy
3 Chihuahuas...Tedi T., Lulu, Bebe G
Adopted Special Needs Rescue...Santo (Redbone Coonhound Mix)
PitBull....Daisy
One Very Patient Husband!
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Rox
- Proven

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by Rox » Wed Apr 30, 2014 7:59 am
They are gorgeous!! Congrats
As I understand it, dominant white will show yellow and recessive white will not show yellow. I have a dominant white hen and we had this discussion on the Aussie finch forum
Quote
Your assumption seems to be that there is no way to visually tell a Dominant White from a Recessive White. This is not so. The whole reason why Recessive White is sought after by colour breeders is because it gives a pure white bird without any trace of yellow. Dominant White birds show a trace of yellow on their flight feathers. According to Geoff Walker's book, if you look even closely the skin of a Recessive White it is lilac not pink as in Dominant White.
Unquote
The topic is here
http://aussiefinchforum.net/viewtopic.p ... 8&start=10
Roxanne
Gouldian's, Blue Breasted Cordon Bleu's, Orange-cheeks, Violet-eared, Black-cheeked waxbill's and Peter's Twinspots
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Smurf
- Sisal Slave

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by Smurf » Wed Apr 30, 2014 2:09 pm
Hi Roxanne, thanks for your comments
What's puzzling me is if you look at the first 2 pictures of mum+dad the yellow on flight feathers can be clearly seen, thier chick in the 3rd photo has absolutely no yellow anywhere on him, he's moulting at moment and still not showing any yellow, i'm wondering if he could be a double factor dominant white because both parents were dominant white ?
I checked his skin as per the post you linked and it's pink ( not lilac )
Padraic
Padraic

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finchmix22
- Mod Extraordinaire

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by finchmix22 » Thu May 01, 2014 7:47 pm
Congrats on the beautiful canaries!
DEBORAH

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Rox
- Proven

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by Rox » Fri May 02, 2014 3:01 am
Smurf
I am honestly not sure if you get a double factor dominant white. My pair is both dominant white (with yellow on their flight feathers) and all of their chicks have either been dominant yellow or dominant white but still with the yellow on the flight feathers.
Hopefully some of the more clued up canary breeders can help us out here

Roxanne
Gouldian's, Blue Breasted Cordon Bleu's, Orange-cheeks, Violet-eared, Black-cheeked waxbill's and Peter's Twinspots