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Heritage Large Fowl Thread - Page 570

post #5691 of 12251
Quote:
Originally Posted by seabass327 View Post

I got some birds from Jaime in 2010.   I don't have any of the originals, but have some 2011 hatch and this years.  They aren't as nice as the males he had pictures of on one of the other boards, but I like them.  Similar to Bob's comment on having too many birds, the feather condition on them isn't the greatest since they run together and feathers do get pulled. These three are march/april hatch, february hatch, and 2011 hatch

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rich Lehnert


Wow!  droolin.gif  If I wasn't already hooked on Andalusians, I would have to get some of these!  I LOVE zipper chickens!  and these guys have some great zippers!

post #5692 of 12251

Seabass, they have lovely barring, even me, a newbie, can see the clear lines of black and white.

 

If I might ask--- do you dress them out? At what weight and age?

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           Eggs available:   Bourbon Red and Sweetgrass Turkeys

             Black Copper Marans, Buff Orpingtons and Speckled Sussex    

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NPIP Tested Clean

 

           Eggs available:   Bourbon Red and Sweetgrass Turkeys

             Black Copper Marans, Buff Orpingtons and Speckled Sussex    

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Grow where you are planted. --Unknown

 

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post #5693 of 12251

I don't keep good tabs on dressed weights and such.   I do eat lots of culls, but am of the opinion that I don't want to know how much they cost.  I just weighed two cockerels that were gutted and skinned at 3 lbs at about 3 months.  The 3 males that i bred from were over 9 lbs as year old birds.  When I cull early for defects, I think the small birds less than 2 months old that dress out (gutted and skinned) a little under 2 lbs taste the best.

 

 

 

above are two birds from a strain I have out of California.   They have much better barring, but the roosters develped personality issues.  The first bird is in my freezer now, the next cockerel is one of his sons.  I'm hoping to get one or two nice ones this year or I won't be keeping this strain.  Unfortunately the birds I raised this year and last had a good deal of variability in the tail development.  I had plenty of "friendly" cockerels, but the only two with full tails weren't nice.  None have become aggressive yet, and I think this is about when it started last year, but only time will tell.

 

rich

post #5694 of 12251

 

Thought that I'd post this. I am sharing pic of White Wyandotte males taken earlier last month for age comparisons. It is a young cockerel and a 1 year old cock bird. I wish I had a more recent pic of this cockerel because now he is developing so nicely. He looks that much nicer now than he did then. He has a long way to go in growing, finishing, and filling out. I think he should finish out into something similar to the old male on the right fairly easily.  Just like with the pics of the Barred Rocks and RI Reds people are sharing, these large Wyandottes take time to develop.


Edited by 7961 - 8/18/12 at 11:40am
post #5695 of 12251

No one has been discussing Redcaps but they are a Heritage breed. I wanted to share pictures of my oldest cock from this year's hatch. He's leading the pack so far in weight  but I wondered if anyone is familiar enough with the breed  to comment on him.  He's  5 months old.  I  haven't found any  serious defects (but may have missed something). I'm not sure if his comb is "bumpy" enough for SOP standards. His weight alone will make him a keeper, probably. I have a few other cocks 2-3 months younger but they are behind him on weight at their age.

Any opinions on his type, etc are very welcome.

 

                            Do not go where the path may lead. Go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.

                  Hi! I share High Meadows Farm with my great husband and son, an Australian Shepherd, an Arab,

                                     a Morgan, 3 cats,  Redcap, and Appenzeller Spitzhauben chickens.

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                            Do not go where the path may lead. Go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.

                  Hi! I share High Meadows Farm with my great husband and son, an Australian Shepherd, an Arab,

                                     a Morgan, 3 cats,  Redcap, and Appenzeller Spitzhauben chickens.

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post #5696 of 12251

looks good to me... i love the Redcap breed but have never had more than a couple of them from McMurry...

Quote:
Originally Posted by flitter View Post

No one has been discussing Redcaps but they are a Heritage breed. I wanted to share pictures of my oldest cock from this year's hatch. He's leading the pack so far in weight  but I wondered if anyone is familiar enough with the breed  to comment on him.  He's  5 months old.  I  haven't found any  serious defects (but may have missed something). I'm not sure if his comb is "bumpy" enough for SOP standards. His weight alone will make him a keeper, probably. I have a few other cocks 2-3 months younger but they are behind him on weight at their age.

Any opinions on his type, etc are very welcome.

 

Elias in Clinton AR.
White Empordanesa. Black French Marans. White Marans. project Lav Marans. an EE project. dun O.E.G.B. project dun crele O.E.G.B.  white bobwhite quail.  cinnamon and red coturnix quail.

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Elias in Clinton AR.
White Empordanesa. Black French Marans. White Marans. project Lav Marans. an EE project. dun O.E.G.B. project dun crele O.E.G.B.  white bobwhite quail.  cinnamon and red coturnix quail.

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post #5697 of 12251

Type isn't too bad Appears a bit pinched in the tail. The white feathers, other than the primaries, would be a disqualification. The picture is dark so can't tell much about the colour.

For what it's worth as a part of this year's hatch he's a cockerel not a cock.


Edited by NYREDS - 8/18/12 at 7:02pm

APA General Licensed Judge with 50 years experience raising and showing all manner of fowl.

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APA General Licensed Judge with 50 years experience raising and showing all manner of fowl.

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post #5698 of 12251
Quote:
Originally Posted by fowlman01 View Post


Bob, you are always quizing us........I'll see how old you are. Do you remember shipping birds by Railway Express?

That is how Sturgeon shipped the Rocks to me. Same thing happened to me with our WLR Cornish. We thought we had a guy who would be in it for the long haul but he couldn't take the setbacks and the birds went to pot.

 

Walt

 

Walt

 

 

I remember Railway Express shipped birds. Some of the first birds I had were a pair of Blue Cochin Bantams from Strombergs that came that way-they came in a bean crate.

APA General Licensed Judge with 50 years experience raising and showing all manner of fowl.

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APA General Licensed Judge with 50 years experience raising and showing all manner of fowl.

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post #5699 of 12251
Quote:
Originally Posted by NYREDS View Post

 

 

I remember Railway Express shipped birds. Some of the first birds I had were a pair of Blue Cochin Bantams from Strombergs that came that way-they came in a bean crate.

Ahh, the good old days. The railroads were required to feed and water poultry if you supplied feed and a water can. Somewhere I have a picture of a railway worker feeding squabs on their way to market by mouth. An old Elmer C. Rice photo if I remember correctly.  Tom

post #5700 of 12251

Are there any old lines of Dominiques still around?  I'd like to find a trio of them.

Don't cuss a farmer with your mouth full.

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Don't cuss a farmer with your mouth full.

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