Sorry, but that person was me and you are just wrong. I have taken those birds to a show and, in fact, there was a white egg laying in the pullet's cage when I went around to it after it had been judged. In fact, the judge even commented on how it was one of the best BW pullets he had seen and was a very nice looking bird.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........................................
Having an Ameraucana that lays a white egg is NOTHING even close to being synonymous with snipping a white feather out of a black! The white eggs I got were a direct result of my breeding efforts to both increase production AND to remove the brown egg gene modifiers so that I would get a better blue. Snipping a white feather out of a black bird is directly addressed in and by the SOP. Laying a white egg is not. There is absolutely NO comparison that can be made here.
Also, anyone who is familiar with the Ameraucana breed knows that the blue egg tint can and often does diminish over time. Both in any given year depending on the rate of lay and the genetics of the bird and also over time given a hens age. SO, if one starts with a bird that lays a light blue egg to begin with, it is not unusual to see that bird lay a white or very near white egg later on.
Not only that but anyone who breeds colored eggs breeds, whether they be blue or brown, knows that there are a number of variables that can cause a variation in color. I've had my darkest Welsummers inexplicable lay a VERY light brown egg on a particular day and then go right back to laying the very dark eggs. Perhaps this is just one reason why egg color is NOT a given trait to be judged on according to the SOP.
Given all the above, I submit that a judge would not DQ a bird "lacking breed characteristic" based on egg color alone. When I said that an "Ameraucana" which laid a brown egg would likely be DQ'd for lacking other breed characteristics, I was referring specifically to the other ACTUAL breed characteristics that are ACTUALLY listed as traits to be judged on and would be recorded on the judges scoring sheet.
God Bless,
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