Please read the description in its entirety before ordering. We also recommend you read our policy on shipping and hatching eggs so you know how we process orders and what to expect after you place your order.
Price is per egg! You may only order up to 15 eggs per shipment. We work with small flocks and only ship fresh eggs. We are breeders who focus on quality over quantity.If you order more than 15 eggs, you order will be split into two shipments, most likely sent at different times. Minimum purchase of 6 eggs for shipping or local pick up. To place an order, select the quantity desired and add to the cart. Please select FREE local pick up option during check out if your order is being picked up locally. If you require shipping, please make sure you are selecting the right fulfillment. Any order under 15 eggs qualifies for shipping rate of $30; Any order above 15, your shipping is $40. We double box and we always try to include a few extras as extra insurance and courtesy., so it adds up quickly.
All orders of chicks and hatching eggs are pre-orders. You will receive a text or email from us when your order is ready for pick up or is being shipped. We only use FEDEX, 2nd day air service to ship our fertile eggs. If you prefer USPS over FEDEX, please let me know in the form you submit when placing your order. In that case, your order will be HELD FOR PICK UP at your local post office. Please note, I will not file any claims with USPS on your behalf. If you choose USPS priority service, you are taking all the risks from the moment we drop off your package at our post office. If you want your package to be held for pick up at your nearest FEDEX facility, please note the address and phone number of the facility you want your package to be delivered.
Real, heritage Delawares are currently endangered from vanishing from the U.S. due to low, limited breeding stock. Delawares have become extremely rare to find, even more so than their counterparts, Rhode Islands and Plymouth Rocks. There are so many great things I can share about this wonderful breed, which in my view, makes the Delaware a very desirable chicken in my homestead.
According the Livestock Conservancy, the Delaware and the Delaware/New Hampshire crosses were the most popular broiler chickens on the Delmarva Peninsula, for about twenty years because of the breed’s ability to produce offspring with predominately white feathering. This is an advantage for carcass appearance because white feathers don’t leave dark spots on the skin when they grow in. Delaware and the Delaware/New Hampshire crosses were replaced in the late 1950s by the Cornish/Plymouth Rock crosses (solid white) that now dominate the broiler industry (2020). The Delaware was developed and bred specifically for the broiler industry. For this reason, the breed was not popular on many small farms and homesteads, thus becoming increasingly rare. Although the breed is very rare, it is being rediscovered by today’s young farmers with whom it is becoming more popular. We are honored to help restore and recover this amazing heritage breed.
Did you know the Delaware is a versatile chicken? When you cross a Delaware with a Rhode Island Red, for example, you produce your own line of Isa Browns or Red Sexlinks, which are super egg layers. The Delaware chicken produces about 4-5 large-jumbo eggs every week (ours are doing about 5-6 per hen, per week). Temperament wise, Delawares are calm, friendly, and curious. They enjoy human interaction and follow their people around. I have a hen, named Amy who loves to go where I go. She loves to hang out with me and chat. They are very chatty also. The roosters are also friendly and exhibit a gentle disposition despite of being great sentinels for their hens.
All in all, the Delaware chicken still makes an excellent dual-purpose bird for today’s small farms. They are low maintenance, requiring just food, water and shelter, and they are a healthy breed.
The breed is noted for its rapid growth and fast feathering. They are medium-sized with a deep and broad body that gives a robust appearance. From the side, the body is shaped like an inverted triangle with a “U” indentation in the back. The keel is also long, extending well to the front at the breast and rear of the legs. They have moderately large single combs with five points, and a medium-sized head and neck. Their comb, wattles, and ear lobes are red, their eyes are reddish-bay, and their beak is reddish horn or yellow. The legs are well set apart and are large and muscular, and shanks and toes are yellow. Males grow up to 8 lbs. and females 6 lbs.
Please read the description in its entirety before ordering. We also recommend you read our policy on shipping and hatching eggs so you know how we process orders and what to expect after you place your order.
Price is per egg! You may only order up to 15 eggs per shipment. We work with small flocks and only ship fresh eggs. We are breeders who focus on quality over quantity.If you order more than 15 eggs, you order will be split into two shipments, most likely sent at different times. Minimum purchase of 6 eggs for shipping or local pick up. To place an order, select the quantity desired and add to the cart. Please select FREE local pick up option during check out if your order is being picked up locally. If you require shipping, please make sure you are selecting the right fulfillment. Any order under 15 eggs qualifies for shipping rate of $30; Any order above 15, your shipping is $40. We double box and we always try to include a few extras as extra insurance and courtesy., so it adds up quickly.
All orders of chicks and hatching eggs are pre-orders. You will receive a text or email from us when your order is ready for pick up or is being shipped. We only use FEDEX, 2nd day air service to ship our fertile eggs. If you prefer USPS over FEDEX, please let me know in the form you submit when placing your order. In that case, your order will be HELD FOR PICK UP at your local post office. Please note, I will not file any claims with USPS on your behalf. If you choose USPS priority service, you are taking all the risks from the moment we drop off your package at our post office. If you want your package to be held for pick up at your nearest FEDEX facility, please note the address and phone number of the facility you want your package to be delivered.
Real, heritage Delawares are currently endangered from vanishing from the U.S. due to low, limited breeding stock. Delawares have become extremely rare to find, even more so than their counterparts, Rhode Islands and Plymouth Rocks. There are so many great things I can share about this wonderful breed, which in my view, makes the Delaware a very desirable chicken in my homestead.
According the Livestock Conservancy, the Delaware and the Delaware/New Hampshire crosses were the most popular broiler chickens on the Delmarva Peninsula, for about twenty years because of the breed’s ability to produce offspring with predominately white feathering. This is an advantage for carcass appearance because white feathers don’t leave dark spots on the skin when they grow in. Delaware and the Delaware/New Hampshire crosses were replaced in the late 1950s by the Cornish/Plymouth Rock crosses (solid white) that now dominate the broiler industry (2020). The Delaware was developed and bred specifically for the broiler industry. For this reason, the breed was not popular on many small farms and homesteads, thus becoming increasingly rare. Although the breed is very rare, it is being rediscovered by today’s young farmers with whom it is becoming more popular. We are honored to help restore and recover this amazing heritage breed.
Did you know the Delaware is a versatile chicken? When you cross a Delaware with a Rhode Island Red, for example, you produce your own line of Isa Browns or Red Sexlinks, which are super egg layers. The Delaware chicken produces about 4-5 large-jumbo eggs every week (ours are doing about 5-6 per hen, per week). Temperament wise, Delawares are calm, friendly, and curious. They enjoy human interaction and follow their people around. I have a hen, named Amy who loves to go where I go. She loves to hang out with me and chat. They are very chatty also. The roosters are also friendly and exhibit a gentle disposition despite of being great sentinels for their hens.
All in all, the Delaware chicken still makes an excellent dual-purpose bird for today’s small farms. They are low maintenance, requiring just food, water and shelter, and they are a healthy breed.
The breed is noted for its rapid growth and fast feathering. They are medium-sized with a deep and broad body that gives a robust appearance. From the side, the body is shaped like an inverted triangle with a “U” indentation in the back. The keel is also long, extending well to the front at the breast and rear of the legs. They have moderately large single combs with five points, and a medium-sized head and neck. Their comb, wattles, and ear lobes are red, their eyes are reddish-bay, and their beak is reddish horn or yellow. The legs are well set apart and are large and muscular, and shanks and toes are yellow. Males grow up to 8 lbs. and females 6 lbs.