junebuggena
Crowing
Correct.You missed my point. According to you if you breed a golden phoenix to a silver phoenix the offspring would not be phoenix.
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Correct.You missed my point. According to you if you breed a golden phoenix to a silver phoenix the offspring would not be phoenix.
Apenzeller spitshauben, maybe?
This statement would apply to many breeds, but gamefowl are special. This cross would produce birds that are accepted by the APA.This is what most people don't understand. It can't be a pure Phoenix if it's a parents were two different varieties. Breed is determined by whether or not a bird meets the breed standard, and it must breed true. Mixed color birds will not meet the standard for coloring, and they will not breed true. Hence they can not be considered 'purebred' anything.
With chickens, it's not about pedigree. I know it can be a difficult concept to grasp. But it honestly doesn't matter if the parents are the same breed. If they are different colors, they produce mixed breeds.
So along that topic. If it is a Phoenix and has yellow legs, does that disqualify it for standard of perfection? I have an email into McMurray to confirm our guesses.
Is it a pullet or cockeral? I'm at a loss on this one.
12 weeks or so