Description
Blue Ameraucana Chicken
Breed Overview and Authenticity
The Blue Ameraucana is one of the officially recognized color varieties by the American Poultry Association and a true blue egg layer—not to be confused with Easter Eggers™ or Araucanas. Cackle Hatchery® began offering Blue Ameraucana day-old chicks in 2015, using stock developed by Master Breeder John W. Blehm.
This is a pure Ameraucana, bred for both egg production and exhibition quality, making it a strong option for customers who want authenticity along with performance.
Appearance and Color Genetics
Blue Ameraucanas are based on black birds, with the blue (Bl) gene diluting black feathers into a slate blue/gray color. Ideally, each feather shows darker edging or “lacing,” giving the bird a clean, defined appearance.
Unlike lavender (self-blue), the blue gene does not breed true. When breeding blue to blue, you can expect:
- ~50% Blue
- ~25% Black
- ~25% Splash
Because of this, customers should expect some variation in chick color, even when ordering Blue Ameraucanas. Cackle Hatchery® prioritizes sending as many blue chicks as possible, but black and splash may be included.
Egg Production and Performance
Blue Ameraucanas are reliable layers, producing approximately 180–200 medium to large eggs per year. Their eggs are a true pastel blue, though a small percentage may lay light green eggs.
They typically begin laying around 8–9 months of age, slightly later than commercial hybrids, but offer steady production once mature.
Temperament and Backyard Suitability
This breed is active and somewhat flighty, but manageable with consistent handling. They do well in backyard flocks and especially in free-range environments where they can forage.
They are non-setters, meaning they rarely go broody, which makes them better suited for egg production rather than natural incubation.
Breeding and Buyer Considerations
There are a few key realities buyers should understand:
- Color variation is normal due to blue genetics (you may receive black or splash chicks)
- Sexing accuracy is lower, averaging 75–80% compared to the typical 90%
- A small percentage (about 1 in 100) may develop scissor beak (cross beak), where the beak does not align properly
These aren’t deal-breakers—but they do matter if you’re managing expectations or selling to customers.
Availability and Ordering Strategy
This is a limited-supply breed and tends to sell out quickly. Customers should plan to order as early as late November for delivery between early February and early August.
FAQ
Do Blue Ameraucanas lay blue eggs?
Yes, they lay true blue eggs, with a small chance of light green. See a full list of our best blue egg layers
Why might I receive black or splash chicks?
Because the blue gene doesn’t breed true, blue-to-blue pairings produce multiple color variations.
Are Blue Ameraucanas the same as Easter Eggers?
No, they are a pure, APA-recognized breed, unlike Easter Eggers.
How accurate is sexing for this breed?
About 75–80%, which is lower than most breeds.
Are Blue Ameraucanas good for beginners?
Yes, if you understand their later laying age and genetic color variation.
Availability
Available Low Availability Unavailable
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kathrynjallenesq –
I ordered three, received four. Unfortunately, one died within hours of arrival. One turned out to have a severe cross beak. The other two are gorgeous, one a dark blue and one more of a medium color perfect slate colored legs nice lacing on the feathers no leakage. The Crossbeak has some dark, solid leakage, very minor. All three are very friendly and gentle and have great personalities the two perfect ones have gorgeous, muffs, and beards, I reported the cross speak to cackle and they gave me a refund for the one . I joined a cross beak group on Facebook, and have learned of others having blue Ameraucanas with cross beaks. This is unfortunate because this breed and color is hard to find. Overall, I would recommend, but expect to have some that are imperfect, or possibly with a cross beak. For the two that are perfect I would give five stars. Three stars due to the cross beak.
meagalina –
I had ordered straight run blue Ameraucanas from Cackle in 2020 and out of 12 ended up with mostly very attractive and productive birds and 1 especially stunning rooster. The girls laid amazing Tiffany blue eggs! I lost many to predators so i ordered more… This is my experience with the Blue Ameraucana females I got 8/2022. There are 5 and they are very different looking. A very poor breed standard. They lay blue green and pale blue eggs at alarmingly slow rates. Yes they are still pretty chickens and eggs but NOWHERE NEAR the quality of the ones I ordered in 2020. I think Cackle needs to refresh their genetics. It’s so disappointing because the first batch were SO great, I’m so sad they were killed:(((( I hope if Cackle improves their genetics they’ll mention it in the description and I’d like to get more one day.
Ashley Holzheimer –
Of the 15 I ordered I received 1 extra of each breed except ym blue ameraucanas. One passed away the second day at home and one we discovered last week is cross beaked, and I fear she will not make it. If only chicken orthodontics were a thing…
The others are all doing okay, but as a new chicken mom I am really worried about my little cross beak. She is not gaining weight as quickly as the others.
Nanci –
Chicks arrived very healthy
I ordered 3 female Americana’s and 3 female French Marans. They threw in an extra of each breed which was very nice but they were both roosters. I called to see what they could do and they told me they would do nothing for me. The person I talked to said that because they gave me extras they would do nothing. What’s the point of giving me extras if they’re roosters.