Yes All chickens will lay eggs without the need for a rooster. All a rooster does is fetilize the eggs, it does not induce the hen to lay an egg, she will do this anyway.
Rhode Island's state mascot is the Red Rooster(Rhode Island Red).
A full grown Rhode island red in good condition can bring about 6 to 10 dollars at spring auction in North America on a good day. Rhode Island reds are common chickens so will not often command higher prices. That same rooster in the fall auctions will bring much lower prices as they are not needed for much other than meat over the winter.
Chickens are birds with a small head, a comb on top, a beak, and two small eyes on the sides. They often have a wattle under their beak and feathers covering their body. Chickens have two legs with claws and walk upright.
Any breed can get along with Rhode Island Reds. But you can only intruduce this other breed and more chickens when they are little. If you don't do that, there will be severe fighting with the chickens.
Golden Comets, Red Stars and Cinnamon Queen are all red sex-linked birds. They are hybrids created by taking a Rhode Island Red or New Hampshire Red rooster and crossing him with a White Rock or Plymouth Barred Rock, White Leghorn or another light hen. These chickens are not a breed - they are hybrids bred for egg production and the fact that the female chicks will be red and the male chicks will be white. The Golden Comet has a White Rock mother, in most of the references I found, and the Red Star will have a Plymouth Barred Rock mother. So they are similar but different.
my rooster. if u know what i mean.
Rhode Island's state mascot is the Red Rooster(Rhode Island Red).
Rhode Island Red chickens.
The type of chickens you should get depends on what kind of chickens you want. There are meat chickens that you kill and eat, layer chickens that lay eggs without a rooster and are good to eat, and there are show chickens which you can enter in state fairs and poultry shows.
Foghorn Leghorn is a Leghorn rooster, not a Rhode Island Red.
Rode Island has Chickens
A full grown Rhode Island red in good condition can bring about 6 to 10 dollars at spring auction in North America on a good day. Rhode Island reds are common chickens so will not often command higher prices. That same rooster in the fall auctions will bring much lower prices as they are not needed for much other than meat over the winter.
They are molting. losing feathers and replacing them with new ones. it happends to all chickens.
Rhode Island
goldish brown
A full grown Rhode island red in good condition can bring about 6 to 10 dollars at spring auction in North America on a good day. Rhode Island reds are common chickens so will not often command higher prices. That same rooster in the fall auctions will bring much lower prices as they are not needed for much other than meat over the winter.
Rhode Island Red Fowls (Chickens & Roosters) Cutthroat trout