actually to be dominant it HAS to have a homozygous (super) form that looks exactly like the heterozygous (het). Other wise it's still not proven what it actually is, like most of what we call dominant.
27 eggs, all pinstripe, never one normal. chances of a heterozygous animal doing that are over 1 in 100 million. I never asked him what he did with the male. I know he has some possible super pin females he showed me, obviously they are going to take quite a bit longer to prove out.