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American Game

American games were created by the various European, and Oriental games that were brought into...

General Information

Breed Purpose
Ornamental
Comb
Pea
Broodiness
Frequent
Climate Tolerance
All Climates
Egg Productivity
Medium
Egg Size
Medium
Egg Color
White
Breed Temperament
Aggressive,Easily handled,Bears confinement well,Noisy
Breed Colors/Varieties
Almost any color imaginable.
Breed Size
Large Fowl
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American games were created by the various European, and Oriental games that were brought into our country by our forefathers. They bred them specifically for cockfighting, leaving us the birds we have today. Cockfighting is a large part of our heritage, like it is in many other countries around the world, but due to recent law changes, these beautiful birds are becoming more popular as an ornamental, or show fowl. There are organizations, like the American Gamefowl Society, that have standards for showing these birds, just as the APA does, and many people are starting to breed these birds for this, instead of the pit, but in the same time keeping the gameness that makes them what they are.

The American gamefowl is broken down into strains, unlike most other fowl. Some of the more popular strains are Hatch, Kelso, Albany, Sweater, Whitehackle, Claret, Roundhead, and Butcher. Strain names originated from people that performed well in the pits, with the birds they made themselves through selective breeding. Strains are also broken down further by other breeders who did well with a particular strain, which in turn had a version of that strain named after them. A good example of this would be the Kelso fowl. The original Kelso was named after Walter Kelso, but one of the most well known breeders that did well with them was Johnny Jumper. This is where the Jumper line of Kelso originated.

Most strains have several well-known bloodlines that other breeders have made famous. I know it sounds confusing, but these are all considered American games, but they have been broken down further based on their performance in the pits. Now days, most of the originators of these lines are long gone, but they are still called by these names, and an experienced gamefowl enthusiast knows that if they have a certain strain, it will have the correct look, and performance attributes of the original line it was named after.

A few more examples of this are: Marsh Butchers, named after Phil Marsh; Sweaters, named after Herman “Sweater” McGinnis, who got his nickname from one day in 1926, the temperature dropped considerably, and Herman McGinnis was seen wearing a red knit sweater with buttons down the front. The bottom went to his knees like a dress, and the sleeves were rolled up to elbows and were bunched up as big as a football. About all you could see was a face, two hands, and two feet sticking out of a red sweater. Immediately people around him would say, " Come here, Sweater” and the name just stuck; Lacy Roundheads, named after Judge Ernest Lacy. There are also other strains that their names came from certain circumstances, or a particular color. Some examples of these would be: Roundheads due to their dark feathering; Whitehackles got their name from being a red hackled fowl that if you lifted the hackle feathers, they were white underneath; Bumblefoot Grey fowl got their name from their color, and how these birds were raised in a very rocky area, and showed up at the pits with damaged feet from this on a regular basis.

As you can see, there are many different strains of American games, and I only touched on a very small percentage of the most well known ones, but this should give you more of an understanding on how the different strains were created.

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American Game eggs

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American Game hen

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American Game rooster

For more information on this breed, see the breed discussion here: https://www.backyardchickens.com/threads/american-game-chickens.1200956/

Latest reviews

Pros: Gorgeous and various coloring, hardy, good mothers, tough.
Cons: Roosters can be aggressive (most I've encountered are more afraid of people than prone to attack them).
The neighbors behind us raise American Game chickens, so I've been around them my entire life. As a child, my sister and I had two hens and they were great mothers and good pets. We also were given a rooster who was a nice bird - not aggressive towards us at all and his feathers were so gorgeous. Many of our chickens descended from these hens and rooster (mixed breeds).

As an adult, I rescued a chick from a stray cat and nursed him back to health. He had a large swelling on his side (probably from the cat), that eventually went down. He turned out to be the only rooster who would attack me, even when I held him. Perhaps he was just too comfortable with me or he just had a streak of aggression in his genes. As a baby, he would perch on my shoulder and was sweet.

I currently have one game hen (rescued from my dogs) and she's in with my bantam rooster. She is comfortable with me, but not nearly as friendly as the laying chicks I raised this summer (probably because I didn't raise her from a chick).
Pros: Healthy, Athletic, Broody, Prolific, Protective, Smart.
Cons: Very little production value, slow maturing, no winter laying.
Amazing; all around good chicken for yard. After 10 years of owning these chickens (and other breeds) I would never own any other breed.

Great pets and yard art. Healthy and smart birds resembling wild jungle fowl in appearance. Great in free range setting. One rooster per flock, do well in harems or pairs.
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Pros: Sporty looking. Great broodys and mothers. Protective.
Cons: You have to keep the rooster seperated.
I have kept two trios of American gamefowl for the past 25 years. Not the same six birds mind you. I really like their showy, athletic looks. The hens are very protective and caring mothers. I put a lot of my incubator hatched chicks with them to raise. Not the best egg layers, but they make up for it in other ways.

Comments

I'm looking for some Spangled Butcher eggs to hatch out this spring can anyone hook me up with a few I have no problem paying for the eggs and shipping. I live in north MS
 
Beautiful birds..Hopefully they can join the flock soon. I love broodys and Protective Roos so they seem to be the perfect addition to the flock. From my perspective I would recommend them to people who love broodys, Protective roos and game birds in general.
 
Not sure if it is the same thing, but my first two hens were from my neighbor, she called them a "game bird Mix", two of the toughest hens i have known. They are hardy, super independent, great mothers both of them (even raised the first hatch together!) and both are near 7 or 8 years with no sign of slowing down, Begawky has a daughter she keeps close even though she is almost 4 months old. They roost together every night, and if Angel isn't"ready for bed" Gawky will call her until she comes.
 
A stag is a game rooster that is still considered a youngster, 18 to 24 mo.
After that they are Cocks.
Here is a nine mo Yellow Leg Hatch stag
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Does anyone know about the egg production rates of the various American gamefowl strains? Hatch, Kelso, Sweater, Roundhead, etc.
 

Item information

Category
Chicken Breeds
Added by
Super Admin
Views
62,473
Watchers
6
Comments
34
Reviews
26
Last update
Rating
4.32 star(s) 28 ratings

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