Heritage & Rare Breeds

La Fleche Chickens

The La Fleche is a large chicken associated with France. It is kept mainly for eggs and traditional table use. The La Fleche is sometimes called the Devil Bird because its two-pointed comb resembles horns.

This profile covers realistic egg expectations, temperament, housing, climate fit, flock compatibility, and the details that matter before adding this breed to a backyard flock.

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140 to 200 large eggs per yearTypical egg output
WhiteEgg color
LargeBody size
V-shapedComb type

What La Fleche Chickens Are Like

La Fleche chickens are generally described as active, alert, independent, and capable foragers. Individual behavior still depends on breeding line, early handling, available space, flock pressure, and the keeper’s routine. Chicks that are handled calmly and adults that have several feeding and resting areas are more likely to show the breed’s best qualities.

The La Fleche is sometimes called the Devil Bird because its two-pointed comb resembles horns. That defining trait should be considered alongside practical management. Appearance alone does not determine whether a breed will be comfortable in a small run, safe with larger flockmates, or easy for children to handle.

Breed Profile at a Glance

OriginFrance
Primary purposeEggs and traditional table use
Typical sizeLarge
Egg production140 to 200 large eggs per year
Egg colorWhite
CombV-shaped
General temperamentActive, alert, independent, and capable foragers
Climate fitHandles warm weather well; exposed comb points need cold protection

Egg Laying

A healthy La Fleche hen may produce about 140 to 200 large eggs per year. The exact number changes with age, daylight, molt, broodiness, diet, stress, and breeding line. Shell color is normally white, although shade can vary through the laying cycle.

Provide complete layer feed, constant clean water, free-choice calcium, and enough nest space. Do not select this breed on egg numbers alone; compare body size, feed use, seasonal laying, and temperament with the goals of the whole flock.

Temperament and Flock Fit

The usual description is active, alert, independent, and capable foragers. Watch actual behavior during introductions because confident or athletic breeds may overwhelm timid bantams, while very gentle or crested birds may need protection from dominant hens.

Multiple feeders, visual barriers, wide roosts, and enough escape space reduce conflict. Roosters should always be evaluated individually, especially in breeds with game ancestry or strongly territorial males.

Housing and Daily Care

  • Match roost height and width to the breed’s large frame, leg length, and foot feathering.
  • Keep bedding dry and ventilation open above roost level without creating a direct nighttime draft.
  • Use secure hardware cloth and covered areas because size, crest shape, or flight ability can increase predator risk.
  • Provide more than one feeding and watering point when the breed shares space with stronger or more numerous flockmates.
  • Check the V-shaped comb, feet, feathers, eyes, and body condition regularly for weather damage or parasites.

Climate and Seasonal Management

Handles warm weather well; exposed comb points need cold protection. Cold-weather success still depends on dry litter, draft-free roosting space, liquid water, and controlled humidity. Hot-weather success depends on shade, airflow, cool water, and avoiding overcrowding.

Pay special attention to exposed combs in freezing weather, heavy feathering during heat, feathered feet during mud and snow, and small body size during abrupt temperature drops. Breed hardiness helps, but housing quality remains the deciding factor.

The Main Tradeoff

They can be flighty and prefer more range and higher fencing than heavy docile breeds.

This does not make the breed a poor choice. It simply identifies the management point most likely to determine whether the birds thrive in your particular coop and climate.

La Fleche Questions

Are La Fleche chickens good for beginners?

They can be a good fit when the keeper can meet their space, climate, and flock-management needs. Review the tradeoff above rather than choosing only by appearance or egg color.

How many eggs do La Fleche hens lay?

A practical expectation is 140 to 200 large eggs per year, with lower output during molt, winter, broodiness, illness, or advanced age.

What color eggs do they lay?

La Fleche hens generally lay white eggs. Shade and size vary by hen and breeding line.

Can they live in a mixed flock?

Usually, provided body-size differences, temperament, feeder access, and male aggression are managed carefully. Slow introductions are safer than placing unfamiliar birds together immediately.