Mea Culpa, and my heartfelt aopologies. I am new to chicken breeding, having come form "Horse" breeding, and in that area, outcrossing to other breeds is a strict "NoNo"; I assumed that it was the same with chickens. The breeders I have talked to without exception (so Far) have all expressed to me that outcrossing to other breeds is not good. I had Icelandics for a while and their thread condemms the practice totally, Loudly and with some nasty comments included.--April
P.S. Along the same lines of inappropriate sarcasm and total disrespect, both Greenhorn and Total Colour were truly childish to Sandiklaws. If you believe that the plan to outcross Dorkings to improve Faverolles is flawed, then explain your reasoning. Constructive criticism is valuable. But when someone lays out a breeding plan and your only comment is "Oh God" and "X2," that is neither valuable nor constructive. It's belittling and mean, with no explanation. Just an emotional hit and run, unbecoming of properly socialized adults. (BTW, outcrossing is a well-established method of improving vitality in many rare breeds of many domestic species. Many pedigreed species, of which poultry breeding has not yet ascended to, have approved outcrossings listed for each breed that the practice applies to in their SOP. Without outcrossing, we would have lost numerous rare breeds of many species throughout modern history; breeds that were only saved by a few dedicated breeders and well-planned outcrossing -- not by smart*ss comments).
(Darn, I was planning to get through this rant without cussing, but temptation can taint even the best-intentioned among us.)
I am not against outcrossing - I firmly believed that it was the standard for breeding [urebred chickens. I believe that one should stick to the rules. Now that I know they aren't the rules, I publicly and most sincerely appologise to any I have offended by what some may have taken as offensive. .
Having said all of that - outcrsossing "may" not have saved the breeds, they may simply have duplicated them. Since they aren't gentically tested (as are many horse breeds) there is no way to tell if they are the "same" breed as the origianl or not. A horse that is suspected of not being purebred (not all breeds go to this length), can be tested and is struck from the register if it isn't genetically pure.
Kate