New fawn bichenos, masked grass finches.

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finchbob
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New fawn bichenos, masked grass finches.

Post by finchbob » Fri Mar 19, 2010 4:21 pm

http://img299.imageshack.us/img299/9174/newxi.jpg

Got some more new birds yestaday, 4 fawn hen bichenos and 3 split for fawn male bichenos, also 3 new masked grass finches. All 10 of them are in a double breeder currently until I move them into my new aviary, it's not ready yet.

The breeder told me breeding fawn females with split for fawn males is best because then you get mostly fawn males and females and the occasional split normal who is guarenteed to be male.
Gouldians, Masked grass finches, Blue capped cordon bleus, Fawn Bichenos, Bengalese.

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Re: New fawn bichenos, masked grass finches.

Post by dfcauley » Fri Mar 19, 2010 4:49 pm

Absolutely beautiful!! I am :mrgreen: with envy over those masked grassfinches. :lol:
Donna

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Re: New fawn bichenos, masked grass finches.

Post by finchbob » Fri Mar 19, 2010 5:35 pm

dfcauley wrote:Absolutely beautiful!! I am :mrgreen: with envy over those masked grassfinches. :lol:
Hehe, getting 2 more pairs on sunday, i'll then have 9 pairs of masked grass finches, all to go into my huge new aviary. I'm starting a colony of them. They're not that easy to get hold of in britain, I managed to find these from 3-4 different sources over the space of a few months, took quite a bit of traveling.
Gouldians, Masked grass finches, Blue capped cordon bleus, Fawn Bichenos, Bengalese.

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Re: New fawn bichenos, masked grass finches.

Post by lovemyfinch » Fri Mar 19, 2010 7:25 pm

Those are some beautiful birds. =D>
Janine

shaftails,gouldians,societies,green singers,owls,cubans, and 1 parrotlet
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Re: New fawn bichenos, masked grass finches.

Post by Sally » Fri Mar 19, 2010 8:01 pm

I am :mrgreen: over the fawn Owls! I just love this mutation.
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Re: New fawn bichenos, masked grass finches.

Post by MLaRue » Fri Mar 19, 2010 8:19 pm

Gorgeous! I was just going to ask where you are Finchbob but I see you referenced Britain. I wondered who in the US would have so many Masked Grassfinches available! Beautiful group of new birds you just got! =D>

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Re: New fawn bichenos, masked grass finches.

Post by cldheath44 » Fri Mar 19, 2010 9:34 pm

Nice birds, Bob!
finchbob wrote:
The breeder told me breeding fawn females with split for fawn males is best because then you get mostly fawn males and females and the occasional split normal who is guarenteed to be male.
Did he or she explain why that would be? Is the fawn mutation in Bichenos different than say Shafttails or Zebras? In those finch species, the fawn mutation is a recessive sex-linked trait. This means that breeding a fawn female to a split for fawn male would give you: 25% normal females, 25% fawn females, 25% normal/fawn males and 25% fawn males. In other words 50% of offspring would be fawn and 50% would be normal (males and females), with the normal males being split. ??????

Christine
Members of my zoo: Goldbreasts, Owls, Orange cheeks, Spices, Shafttails, ST canary, Saffron, Eur. Goldfinch, lutino keet, Gouldian, BBCB's, Scarlet Chested Parakeet, Green Twinspots, Bourke, 4 Pomeranians, 2 fish tanks, 1 leopard gecko, 1 turtle, 2 frogs, 1 mini lop rabbit, 8 chickens, 2 ducks and my 9 year old son! :)

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Re: New fawn bichenos, masked grass finches.

Post by L in Ontario » Fri Mar 19, 2010 9:58 pm

Congratulations on all the new birds - very nice!!
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Re: New fawn bichenos, masked grass finches.

Post by MLaRue » Sat Mar 20, 2010 1:26 am

cldheath44 wrote:Nice birds, Bob!
finchbob wrote:
The breeder told me breeding fawn females with split for fawn males is best because then you get mostly fawn males and females and the occasional split normal who is guarenteed to be male.
Did he or she explain why that would be? Is the fawn mutation in Bichenos different than say Shafttails or Zebras? In those finch species, the fawn mutation is a recessive sex-linked trait. This means that breeding a fawn female to a split for fawn male would give you: 25% normal females, 25% fawn females, 25% normal/fawn males and 25% fawn males. In other words 50% of offspring would be fawn and 50% would be normal (males and females), with the normal males being split. ??????

Christine
I wonder if this theory is the same for Cherry Finches? Their fawn mutation?

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Re: New fawn bichenos, masked grass finches.

Post by jamezyboo21 » Sat Mar 20, 2010 1:43 am

Very nice finches. I especially like the owls.
Society Finches, Fire Finches, Strawberry Finches, Owl Finches, Plum Head Finch, Goldbreast Waxbill Finches, Orange Cheek Waxbill Finches, Blue Capped Cordon Finches, Zebra Finches, Bronzewing Mannikin Finches, Red-Cheek Cordon Blue Finches, and Button Quail

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Re: New fawn bichenos, masked grass finches.

Post by finchbob » Sat Mar 20, 2010 5:59 am

cldheath44 wrote:Nice birds, Bob!
finchbob wrote:
The breeder told me breeding fawn females with split for fawn males is best because then you get mostly fawn males and females and the occasional split normal who is guarenteed to be male.
Did he or she explain why that would be? Is the fawn mutation in Bichenos different than say Shafttails or Zebras? In those finch species, the fawn mutation is a recessive sex-linked trait. This means that breeding a fawn female to a split for fawn male would give you: 25% normal females, 25% fawn females, 25% normal/fawn males and 25% fawn males. In other words 50% of offspring would be fawn and 50% would be normal (males and females), with the normal males being split. ??????

Christine
I heard it was different, this breeder seemed to know what he was talking about anyway. He said that this is the setup he uses, he prefers doing it this way because it keeps the strong normal gene in the blood and prevents the line from getting too weak. He says about 1 in 4-5 of the chicks he gets from a pair like this is a normal split for fawn, and 100% of the time that is a male, the other 4 would be fawns and either sex
Gouldians, Masked grass finches, Blue capped cordon bleus, Fawn Bichenos, Bengalese.

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Re: New fawn bichenos, masked grass finches.

Post by cldheath44 » Sat Mar 20, 2010 6:41 am

finchbob wrote:
I heard it was different, this breeder seemed to know what he was talking about anyway. He said that this is the setup he uses, he prefers doing it this way because it keeps the strong normal gene in the blood and prevents the line from getting too weak. He says about 1 in 4-5 of the chicks he gets from a pair like this is a normal split for fawn, and 100% of the time that is a male, the other 4 would be fawns and either sex
That's interesting. It makes sense to keep the strong normal gene in the mix. You'll have to let us know if you get those same results! :D

Christine
Members of my zoo: Goldbreasts, Owls, Orange cheeks, Spices, Shafttails, ST canary, Saffron, Eur. Goldfinch, lutino keet, Gouldian, BBCB's, Scarlet Chested Parakeet, Green Twinspots, Bourke, 4 Pomeranians, 2 fish tanks, 1 leopard gecko, 1 turtle, 2 frogs, 1 mini lop rabbit, 8 chickens, 2 ducks and my 9 year old son! :)

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Re: New fawn bichenos, masked grass finches.

Post by CandoAviary » Sat Mar 20, 2010 10:12 am

Beautiful flock you have there...I just love those yellow beaks. Something different and very showy :D

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