Nope. I haven't worked for them in a while. Too busy. I DID recommend they find a lavender breed.I wonder if our very own NoseyChickens has something to do with that...I think that's the company she is working for now...![]()
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Nope. I haven't worked for them in a while. Too busy. I DID recommend they find a lavender breed.I wonder if our very own NoseyChickens has something to do with that...I think that's the company she is working for now...![]()
I know of a case where a Leghorn was DQ'd for laying a brown egg in front of a judge. "Lacking breed characteristics" (as Jean mentioned) was used. It is controversial and not done very often and only IF the bird lays the egg in front of the judge but it can happen.
The egg needs to be blue or green. Its part of the breed. It is lacking a breed characteristic.
I read earlier about the person who bred there chickens to lay white eggs. When it comes to showing only: if they would take one of those birds to a show it should be disqualified.
To me its like snipping a white feather out of a black, and hoping the judge doesn't notice. You would be like, please don't lay an egg, its the wrong color........................................
I agree. Ameraucana's are still a continuing work in progress.I'm on the fence on that one. On the one hand, the blue egg is a breed characteristic and obviously important. On the other hand, the point of showing birds isn't so much to say that you have the best birds but to get an objective outside opinion on how your breeding program is progressing (or at least it should be the point for serious breeders).
The person earlier with the white eggs did not really select for white egg color in their birds. What they were selecting for was productivity, and it just happened that their most productive layers also happened to have an off color. They freely admit that egg color is a work in progress on their birds, they just about have productivity where they want it to be and will soon be working on getting a proper blue egg along with productivity as the "next step" in their breeding program. In this case, showing a bird with an undesirable egg color would still have a benefit to this breeder to help them in knowing where their program stands on other traits beside egg color.
Hello all, I've been lurking on this thread for a week or so and I think I love Ameraucanas! I've never had chickens before, but I'm planning to get some soon. How do I go about finding some actual Ameraucanas? I see them listed in Craigslist, but after reading this thread I just don't believe that they are the real deal. I want to raise five chicks, and I'm not sure I'm up to hatching eggs on my first chicken experiment.