Partridge Cochin Standard Chicken

(12 customer reviews)

As low as: $4.73

Hatching on May 27, 2026

Order now for estimated delivery by May 30, 2026.

  • Partridge Cochin Standard – Sold as Baby Chicks Only 
       Minimums – Not Sexed = 3
                                Female=3
                                Male=1
                                Total of 3 birds to ship       
Seasonal/Shipped Mid Feb thru Mid AugustLimit of 10 on Sexed Cochins
Sex Price Quantity
1 - 9
$6.49
10 - 14
$5.97
15 - 24
$5.37
25+
$4.73
1+
$14.99
1+
$13.49

Breed Facts

  • Poultry Show Class: Asiatic Class
  • Weights – Hen—–8 1/2 lbs
    Rooster——11 lbs
    Pullet—7 lbs
    Cockerel—-9 lbs
  • Purpose and Type – Ornamental and meat; Exhibition
  • Egg Shell Color – Brown
  • Egg Production – 110-160 eggs per year (*estimates only, see FAQ)
  • Egg Size: Medium-Large
  • Temperament: Docile
  • Fertility Percentage: 40-55%
  • Broody: Setter
  • Mating Ratio: 6 Females to 1 Male
  • Roost Height: 0 to 2 feet
  • Country of Origin – Asia
  • APA: Yes, Recognized by the American Standard of Perfection in 1874.
  • TLC: Watch Status, Considered a sustainable heritage chicken breed
  • Breeder Farm Source: Cackle Hatchery®  Poultry Breeding Farm” developing our bloodline or strain of pure color varieties of standard size Cochin chickens since 1975.

Description

Partridge Cochin Standard Chicken

Breed Overview and Origin

The Partridge Cochin Standard Chicken is a large, docile, feather-legged chicken with rich brown and black feathering. If you want a calm, eye-catching bird with traditional Cochin fluff and family-farm appeal, this variety is a strong choice.

Cochins are known for their size, abundant feathering, feathered legs, and gentle personalities. This standard-size variety carries those same classic traits while adding a beautiful partridge color pattern that gives the bird a warm, detailed look in the flock.

Cackle Hatchery® offers Partridge Cochin Standard Chickens as baby chicks. The product page notes that Cackle’s breeding farm has developed pure color varieties of standard-size Cochins since 1975, and the breed is listed with Watch status through The Livestock Conservancy.


Appearance and Characteristics

These large Cochins have soft, full feathering, feathered legs and feet, and a partridge color pattern made up of brown and black feathering. The overall look is fluffy, rounded, and full of farmyard charm.

Because this is a standard-size Cochin, customers should expect a large chicken rather than a bantam. Even with their size, these birds are known for being extremely docile and manageable.

Feathered feet are beautiful, but they need dry conditions. Mud, wet bedding, and snow can collect in the feathers, so a clean coop, covered run, and regular foot checks help keep them comfortable.


Partridge Cochin Standard vs Partridge Cochin Bantam

The standard-size bird and the Partridge Cochin Bantam Chicken share the same general Cochin charm, feathered legs, and partridge color family. The main difference is size.

Choose the standard-size version if you want a large chicken with more flock presence and a fuller farmyard look. Choose the bantam if you want the same feather-legged Cochin style in a smaller bird that takes less coop space. Cackle’s bantam listing notes that Partridge Cochin Bantams are sold as baby chicks and ship seasonally from early February through mid-August.


Comparing Other Cochin Standard Varieties

This partridge variety shares the same large body, calm temperament, soft feathering, and feathered feet found in other standard Cochins. The main difference is feather color.

Customers who like this breed family may also want to compare Barred Cochin Standard Chickens, Blue Cochin Standard Chickens, Buff Cochin Standard Chickens, Golden Laced Cochin Standard Chickens, Silver Laced Cochin Standard Chickens, Splash Cochin Standard Chickens, and White Cochin Standard Chickens. Cackle’s baby chick category shows multiple standard Cochin varieties available among its large live poultry selection.

Customers who are flexible on color may also like the Standard Cochin Surplus Chicken Special, a straight-run hatchery choice option for standard Cochins.


Egg Production and Utility

Hens may lay brown eggs, but this breed is not a high-production layer. Most customers choose Cochins for their docile temperament, ornamental value, feathered legs, broodiness, and family-friendly nature.

Cochin hens are often known for going broody and raising chicks. That can be a benefit for customers who enjoy natural hatching or want a hen that may help mother chicks.

If your main goal is maximum egg production, choose a dedicated laying breed. However, if you want a gentle, fluffy, large chicken with beauty and personality, this variety is a great option.


Temperament and Suitability

Cochins are extremely docile and are known for behaving well around children. That makes this variety a good fit for family farms, backyard flocks, ornamental coops, and customers who want a large chicken with a gentle personality.

Because these birds are large and heavily feathered, they need enough room to move comfortably. They also need clean water, balanced feed, predator protection, shade during hot weather, and dry bedding.

Their calm nature also makes them easier to manage than many lighter, more active breeds. With gentle handling, they can become enjoyable flock favorites.


Feathered Feet Care

Feathered legs and feet are one of the most recognizable Cochin traits. They add beauty, but they also require practical care.

Keep bedding dry, avoid muddy runs when possible, and check the feet during wet or snowy weather. Packed mud, ice, or debris can collect in the feathers. Low roosts can also help large Cochins get on and off the perch safely.

For general chick and flock care, Cackle’s Chicken Care Instructions page is a helpful internal resource.


Broodiness and Mothering Ability

Many Cochin hens are reliable broodies and may do well raising chicks. This makes them useful for customers who want a natural mothering breed in the flock.

However, broodiness can also interrupt egg production. If a customer wants steady laying, a broody hen may be less ideal. If the customer values natural hatching, a Cochin can be an excellent addition.


Show and Ornamental Value

This variety has strong ornamental appeal because of its large body, fluffy feathering, feathered legs, and patterned plumage. It can also be a nice option for customers interested in exhibition or rare breed projects.

Cackle’s product page lists the breed with Watch status through The Livestock Conservancy and identifies its breeder farm source as Cackle Hatchery® Poultry Breeding Farm, which has developed pure color standard-size Cochin varieties since 1975.

For best condition, customers should keep birds in clean, dry housing, protect the foot feathering, and handle them calmly.


Is This Breed Right for Your Flock?

Choose this variety if you want:

A large standard-size Cochin
A brown and black partridge color pattern
A docile backyard chicken
A kid-friendly family farm bird
A feather-legged chicken
A broody hen that may raise chicks
A calm ornamental breed
A miniature bantam version to compare
A standard Cochin surplus option to compare
A Cackle bloodline developed since 1975

Overall, this is a great choice if you want a large, gentle, beautiful chicken with strong family-farm appeal. It is not the best choice for maximum egg production, but it is excellent for customers who want ornamental value, broodiness, calm temperament, and classic Cochin charm.

Customers still comparing breeds can use Cackle’s baby chicks for sale, rare chicken breeds for sale, Chicken Breed Selector, or Chicken Breeds List Comparison Chart.


Breed History and Preservation

Cochins became famous in America during the 1800s because of their impressive size, abundant feathering, feathered legs, and calm temperament. They helped shape the early poultry fancy movement and remain popular with customers who want large ornamental chickens.

The partridge color gives this standard-size bird a classic patterned look while still keeping the soft, rounded Cochin type. Cackle’s listing connects this variety to its long-running standard Cochin breeding program, which has developed pure color varieties since 1975.

Today, this variety remains a good choice for customers who want a gentle, heritage-style chicken with beauty, size, and a friendly disposition.


Recognition and Availability

Cackle Hatchery® sells Partridge Cochin Standard Chickens as baby chicks. Availability changes by hatch date and season, so customers should check the product page and Cackle’s Availability Chart before planning an order.

Customers who like this breed may also want to compare the miniature Partridge Cochin Bantam Chicken or the Standard Cochin Surplus Chicken Special.


Related Breeds and Helpful Cackle Hatchery® Resources

If you like this variety, you may also want to compare Partridge Cochin Bantam Chickens, Standard Cochin Surplus Chicken Special, Barred Cochin Standard Chickens, Blue Cochin Standard Chickens, Buff Cochin Standard Chickens, Golden Laced Cochin Standard Chickens, Silver Laced Cochin Standard Chickens, Splash Cochin Standard Chickens, and White Cochin Standard Chickens.

Helpful Cackle resources include baby chicks for sale, rare chicken breeds for sale, Chicken Breed Selector, Chicken Breeds List Comparison Chart, Chicken Care Instructions, and Availability Chart.


FAQ: Partridge Cochin Standard Chicken

What is a Partridge Cochin Standard Chicken?

It is a large, docile, feather-legged Cochin with brown and black partridge feathering, soft plumage, and strong ornamental value.

What does this chicken look like?

It has a large fluffy body, feathered legs and feet, and beautiful brown-and-black patterned plumage.

Does this breed have feathered feet?

Yes. Like other Cochins, it has feathered legs and feet.

Is this variety friendly?

Yes. Cochins are known for being extremely docile and easy to enjoy in backyard or family farm settings.

Is it good around children?

Yes, with normal supervision and gentle handling. Its calm temperament makes it a good option for families.

What color eggs do the hens lay?

Hens generally lay brown eggs.

Is this a good egg-laying breed?

It can lay eggs, but it is not a high-production layer. Most customers choose it for temperament, beauty, size, feathered legs, and broodiness.

Are the hens broody?

Many Cochin hens go broody and may do well raising chicks.

Is this breed good for beginners?

Yes, it can work well for beginners who want a calm, large chicken. Beginners should be ready to manage feathered feet, large body size, and dry housing needs.

Does it need special care?

It needs the same basic care as other chickens, plus extra attention to feathered feet. Keep bedding dry, avoid muddy runs, and check feet during wet or snowy weather.

What is the difference between the standard and bantam versions?

The standard version is the large bird. The bantam version has the same general feather-legged look and partridge color pattern in a smaller size.

Is this variety good for showing?

It has strong ornamental and exhibition appeal because of its large size, feathered legs, and patterned plumage.

Does Cackle Hatchery® maintain a standard Cochin breeding program?

Yes. Cackle’s product page notes that its breeding farm has developed pure color varieties of standard-size Cochins since 1975.

Does Cackle Hatchery® sell this variety as baby chicks?

Yes. Cackle sells Partridge Cochin Standard Chickens as baby chicks.

Where can I check availability?

Check Cackle Hatchery’s Availability Chart and the product page for current hatch and shipping options.

Availability

Available   Low Availability   Unavailable  
Date Available?
2026-05-25
2026-05-26
2026-05-27
2026-06-01
2026-06-02
2026-06-03
2026-06-08
2026-06-09
2026-06-10
2026-06-15
2026-06-16
2026-06-17
2026-06-22
2026-06-23
2026-06-24
2026-06-29
2026-06-30
2026-07-01
2026-07-06
2026-07-07
2026-07-08
2026-07-13
2026-07-14
2026-07-15
2026-07-20
2026-07-21
2026-07-22
2026-07-27
2026-07-28
2026-07-29
2026-08-03
2026-08-04
2026-08-05
2026-08-10
2026-08-11
2026-08-12
2026-08-17
2026-08-18
2026-08-19
2026-08-24
2026-08-25
2026-08-26
2026-08-31
2026-09-01
2026-09-02
2026-09-07
2026-09-08
2026-09-09
2026-09-14
2026-09-15
2026-09-16
2026-09-21
2026-09-22
2026-09-23
2026-10-05
2026-10-06
2026-10-07
2026-10-12
2026-10-13
2026-10-14
2026-10-19
2026-10-20
2026-10-21

Vaccinations

Click link for details: Vaccination Policy

Videos

12 reviews for Partridge Cochin Standard Chicken

4.8
Based on 8 reviews
5 star
75
75%
4 star
25
25%
3 star
0%
2 star
0%
1 star
0%
  1. Lisa Elizardo

    This is a sweet calm breed. Not jittery like the leghorn. Very happy with them.

  2. donyaquick

    Lovely birds! I ordered 4 pullets and they arrived with an extra chick of the same type. All 5 birds are very healthy, very friendly, about 3 to 3.5lbs at 16 weeks so far and growing well. All of them have fully feathered out with the female coloration, so I believe they are indeed all pullets. They have received many compliments from people who have seen them; they are georgeous even so young. Highly recommend this breed/color!

  3. marieamanda910

    We have always gotten good chicks from Cackle. The Cochins are our favorite!! We’ve gotten chicken multiple places but never the same quality.

  4. audra oldham

    I did get only 4 hens out of a clutch of 15 straight run so that was not a plus at first. We did get some from a hatchery that does sex them so we have hens now but i will say in comparison that Cackles Partridge cochins are far superior. So I have a LOT of very nice Roosters to choose from to sire my flock. I did not keep a rooster from the other hatchery. He was ok but the Cackle Roos were fabulous.

  5. Erbagirl

    PCS Review

    I wanted hens so badly but mistakenly ordered SR. Three I ordered and the one extra all turned out to be Roos:(. All did arrive healthy and well.

  6. John

    Partridge Cochin Standard

    Loved the chicks we received from you

  7. Jonathan

    Good

    Decent birds but we lost half of them just after the guarantee ran out

  8. Roaque

    Quality bird

    Had some trouble early on with shipping. Finally landed one that would live. She is a very pretty bird and hardy. She took best in her breed class at County Fair this year. Judge mentioned how well she was put together and really enjoyed our pullet. Thank you Cackle for working with me on getting birds. And thank you for raising quality birds for us to show.

  9. Gio

    Understanding

    Got some chick’s from this hatchery, was skeptical at first but it wasn’t bad for my first time. All but a couple came in dead but they kept dieing for some reason. I emailed the hatchery and they took care of me cause I know I’m hard headed. They reshiped my chick’s to me. Will definitely be the only hatchery I order from. Thank you guys so much I know I was a lot to handle.

  10. Leslie Iowa October 2015

    Cackle Hatchery

    I would like to thank you for adding on money for the Best Feather Legged Cockerel. This year I was lucky enough to win this at the State Fair. I really appreciate it.

  11. Elaine Tennessee March 2010

    Cackle Hatchery

    I wanted to let you know how please I am with the substitutions you made to my order!!! Thank you for taking the time to call me and spend your time helping me with this instead of just making the decision to send other birds. I am so looking forward to having your chicks. I have friend that use your hatchery and have for years with wonderful success. Thanks again

  12. Joyce North Dakota May 2011

    Thank You

    My order arrived yesterday morning, exactly when predicted. Thank you for the phone call as this time my postmaster did not call, but because of your call I knew to call and arrange to come pick up my chicksn right away in the morning. I am thrilled with the condition of my chicks. I was a little worried as you are so far away but you came highly recommended from our favorite helper at the local TSC. Every chick arrived healthy and lively. Now, 24 hours later they are still all lively, eating and drinking.

Add a review