Description
Crazy Cackle Toppies Chicken
Breed Overview
The Crazy Cackle Toppies Chicken is a fun, ornamental, crested chicken created for customers who want something truly different in the backyard flock. Introduced by Cackle Hatchery® in early 2020, these birds are known for wild “toppie” head feathering, muff and beard feathers under the beak, hardy chicks, cream eggs, and unpredictable feather colors.
As the name suggests, Crazy Cackle Toppies are meant to be eye-catching. Most birds are primarily black feathered, but customers may also see splashes or patches of golden, white, buff, or other lighter feathering. Because no single overall color pattern is expected to look exactly the same, each bird develops its own personality and appearance as it matures.
Cackle Hatchery® lists Crazy Cackle Toppies in its Rare Chicken Breeds and What’s New categories, making them a strong choice for customers who want a conversation-starting chicken rather than a traditional standard breed.
Appearance and Characteristics
Crazy Cackle Toppies develop into full-headdress “toppy” chickens with muffed and bearded feathering under the beak. Their crest gives them a distinctive top-hat look, while the muffs and beard add extra facial feathering for a quirky, ornamental appearance.
Expected traits include:
- Full crested head feathering
- Muffs and beard under the beak
- Mostly black feathering
- Possible golden, white, or buff color splashes
- Medium cream-colored eggs
- Hardy, vigorous chicks
- Strong ornamental backyard appeal
- One-of-a-kind feather pattern variation
Because this is a variable ornamental chicken, customers should expect personality and appearance differences from bird to bird. That variation is part of the appeal.
Egg Color and Laying Expectations
Crazy Cackle Toppies hens lay medium-sized cream eggs. Customers should choose this variety mainly for its unusual appearance, backyard fun, and ornamental value rather than maximum egg production.
Egg production can vary by hen, age, daylight, feed, weather, and flock management. However, for customers who want a visually unique chicken that also contributes eggs to the basket, Crazy Cackle Toppies offer a nice balance of novelty and usefulness.
Ordering and Availability
Crazy Cackle Toppies were first introduced in early 2020. Cackle Hatchery® notes that customers can book and reserve them for the March through July season.
This variety is sold as not sexed only. Cackle Hatchery® explains that Crazy Cackle Toppies are very difficult to vent sex as baby chicks, and sexing accuracy is not reliable enough for female or male ordering options. For that reason, customers should plan for a mix of males and females when ordering.
Because availability can change during the hatch season, customers should check Cackle Hatchery’s Chicken Availability Chart before ordering.
Important Note About Sexing
Crazy Cackle Toppies are sold as not sexed chicks because they are very hard to vent sex accurately.
This matters for customers who cannot keep roosters because of local ordinances, neighborhood rules, or flock management needs. Before ordering, make sure you have a plan for extra males if your hatch includes roosters.
Customers who need female chicks only may want to choose a breed or variety that Cackle Hatchery® offers with sexed female ordering options.
Temperament and Flock Suitability
Crazy Cackle Toppies are hardy, vigorous chicks that ship well. Their ornamental look makes them a fun choice for backyard keepers who enjoy unusual chickens with personality and flair.
This variety can work well for:
- Backyard ornamental flocks
- Rare and novelty chicken keepers
- Customers who want crested chickens
- Flocks where exact feather color is not important
- Keepers who enjoy one-of-a-kind birds
- Customers who want a fun “top hat” chicken
- Mixed flocks with proper space and introductions
However, customers who want a standardized show breed, predictable feather color, or guaranteed female chicks should consider another variety.
Crested Chicken Care Tips
Because Crazy Cackle Toppies develop a full headdress, customers should pay attention to crest care and visibility. Crested chickens can be especially eye-catching, but large head feathering may sometimes reduce vision or collect moisture if housing is not managed well.
Crested chicken guides commonly note that crested birds may need extra predator protection because head feathers can limit vision, and full crests should be kept dry in wet or freezing weather.
For best results, provide:
- Predator-resistant housing
- A clean, dry coop
- Good ventilation without drafts
- Dry bedding
- Fresh water at all times
- A covered or well-drained run
- Enough space to prevent feather picking
- Regular visual checks of the crest, muffs, and beard
- Extra caution around mud, ice, and wet feeders or waterers
If a bird’s crest blocks vision too much, careful trimming around the eyes may be helpful. Any trimming should be done gently and only as needed.
Crazy Cackle Toppies vs Polish Chickens
Crazy Cackle Toppies and Polish chickens both appeal to customers who like crested birds, but they are not the same.
A Crazy Cackle Toppies Chicken is a Cackle Hatchery® ornamental project variety with a full toppy headdress, muffs, beard, mostly black feathering, and unpredictable accent colors.
A Polish chicken is a recognized crested chicken breed group with specific varieties, classic top-hat crests, and a long exhibition history.
Choose Crazy Cackle Toppies if you want a fun, unpredictable, novelty crested chicken with mixed color expression.
Choose Polish chickens if you want a more traditional crested breed with established varieties and a classic show-bird look.
Crazy Cackle Toppies vs Other Rare Chicken Breeds
Crazy Cackle Toppies are best for customers who want flock personality and appearance variation. They are not designed to replace a standard production layer or a formal exhibition breed.
Choose Crazy Cackle Toppies if you want:
- A unique Cackle Hatchery® variety
- A full toppy crest
- Muffs and beard
- Medium cream eggs
- Hardy chicks
- Unpredictable feather color
- A novelty chicken for backyard enjoyment
- A bird that looks different from everything else in the flock
For customers comparing unusual poultry, Cackle’s Rare Chicken Breeds for Sale category is a helpful place to browse. Cackle Hatchery® offers more than 230 poultry varieties and has been family-owned and operated since 1936.
Is the Crazy Cackle Toppies Chicken Right for Your Flock?
Choose Crazy Cackle Toppies chickens if you want:
- A fun ornamental backyard chicken
- A full headdress or “toppy” look
- Muffs and beard feathering
- Mostly black birds with surprise color accents
- Medium cream eggs
- Hardy, vigorous chicks
- A rare novelty bird introduced by Cackle Hatchery®
- A flock addition where no two birds look exactly alike
However, consider another breed if you need sexed females, predictable color, high egg production, or an APA-recognized exhibition breed. In short, Crazy Cackle Toppies are best for customers who want personality, surprise, and a truly different backyard chicken.
Care and Housing Tips
Crazy Cackle Toppies need the same dependable care as other standard-size chickens, with extra attention to crest visibility and feather cleanliness. They do best with a clean coop, secure run, proper feed, fresh water, and predator protection.
For best results, provide:
- A dry, well-ventilated coop
- Predator-resistant fencing
- Clean bedding
- Fresh water at all times
- Balanced chick starter and age-appropriate feed
- Enough roosting space
- Nest boxes for cream eggs
- Shade and airflow during hot weather
- Protection from drafts and damp bedding in cold weather
- Regular checks for crest, muff, and beard cleanliness
Because these chickens can develop heavy head feathering, keep waterers and feeders arranged so facial feathers stay as clean and dry as possible.
Related Breeds and Helpful Cackle Hatchery® Resources
Customers who like Crazy Cackle Toppies may also enjoy other crested, rare, ornamental, or novelty chickens.
Helpful Cackle Hatchery® links for this product page include:
FAQ: Crazy Cackle Toppies Chicken
What is a Crazy Cackle Toppies Chicken?
A Crazy Cackle Toppies Chicken is a Cackle Hatchery® ornamental crested chicken with a full headdress, muffs, beard, mostly black feathering, possible golden, white, or buff accents, and medium cream eggs.
When were Crazy Cackle Toppies introduced?
Cackle Hatchery® first introduced Crazy Cackle Toppies in early 2020.
What do Crazy Cackle Toppies look like?
They are mainly black feathered birds with possible splashes or patches of golden, white, and buff feathering. They also develop a full toppy crest with muffed and bearded facial feathering.
Will every Crazy Cackle Toppies chicken look the same?
No. One of the main appeals of Crazy Cackle Toppies is that no single overall feather pattern is expected to look exactly the same.
What color eggs do Crazy Cackle Toppies lay?
Crazy Cackle Toppies lay medium-sized cream eggs.
Are Crazy Cackle Toppies sexed?
No. Cackle Hatchery® sells them as not sexed only because they are very difficult to vent sex accurately as baby chicks.
Why are Crazy Cackle Toppies sold as not sexed only?
They are hard to vent sex as chicks, and sexing accuracy is not reliable enough for male or female order options.
Are Crazy Cackle Toppies good for backyard flocks?
Yes. They can be a fun choice for backyard flocks, especially for customers who want a hardy, ornamental, unusual chicken.
Are Crazy Cackle Toppies good egg layers?
They lay medium cream eggs, but customers should choose them more for ornamental value and novelty than maximum egg production.
Are Crazy Cackle Toppies hardy?
Yes. Cackle Hatchery® describes them as hardy and vigorous chicks that ship well.
Are Crazy Cackle Toppies a recognized breed?
They are best described as a Cackle Hatchery® ornamental project variety rather than a formal APA-recognized breed standard.
Do Crazy Cackle Toppies have crests?
Yes. They develop a full toppy headdress.
Do Crazy Cackle Toppies have muffs and beards?
Yes. They develop muffed and bearded feathering under the beak.
Do crested chickens need special care?
Crested chickens may need extra attention to visibility, predator protection, and keeping the crest dry and clean. Full crests can sometimes reduce vision or collect moisture.
Can Crazy Cackle Toppies free range?
They may enjoy outdoor space, but customers should use caution with crested birds because head feathering can affect visibility. Secure fencing and predator protection are important.
What is the difference between Crazy Cackle Toppies and Polish chickens?
Crazy Cackle Toppies are a Cackle Hatchery® ornamental project variety with unpredictable colors, muffs, beard, and a toppy crest. Polish chickens are a traditional crested breed group with established varieties and a classic top-hat look.
When can I reserve Crazy Cackle Toppies?
Cackle Hatchery® notes that Crazy Cackle Toppies can be booked and reserved for the March through July season.
Where can I check Crazy Cackle Toppies availability?
Customers can check Cackle Hatchery’s Chicken Availability Chart for current hatch and shipping timing. Availability can change during the season, so checking the chart helps customers plan ahead.
hannahwilkins715 –
Very sweet and friendly birds.
DaLayne Schmidt –
very nice breed to purchase. They are extremely great egg layers. We ordered around 5 and 2 were roosters. I do not recommend the roosters though they were extremely aggressive to people from little kids to adults, otherwise a great chicken breed.
Angela Miedema –
Beautiful roosters! We ordered 5 straight run and received 4 hens and 2 roosters. The roosters definitely take the show for this breed. Initially, they were unremarkable with simple black feathers but by the time they are full grown the black takes on an iridescent quality and shine purple and green. Mine also developed very thin slivers of color at the tips of their feathers. One had silver tips and the other gold. Both roosters had v shaped combs and were very attentive to and defensive of the hens. They did well with my husband and I and our older kids (9 and 7). We did have some problems with the younger kids though (3 and 2). The hens have a very similar demeanor to polish in that they are a bit skittish but not unfriendly. They are decent layers and are good at announcing potential predators. This does make them a bit louder than some of my other breeds.