Quote:
That's exactly how the better poultry farmers (including the backyard flocks that every farm had) handled things years ago. There were no mail-order chickens, no hybrids to speak of: everyone who aspired above the level of subsistence farmer selectively bred not just their chickens, but their sheep and their cattle and their horses and their turnips and their corn. Among animals, chickens were the easiest to work with, however, because of their size and the rapid cycling of generations.
Read the old farm books: the best were pre-WWII, when the emphasis shifted from home-based agriculture to industrial agriculture (My high-school Vocational Agriculture textbooks back in the 1960s were published by Dow Chemical). Practically all the chicken breeds we talk about now came about from breeding programs by family farmers. And family farmers who are interested (and by farmer, I have down-sized the definition considerably to include the typical member of this board) in reviving the chickens' original purpose--to provide a self-sustaining supply of eggs and meat and new chickens--can do it without re-inventing the wheel. HaikuHeritage has it exactly right.
That's exactly how the better poultry farmers (including the backyard flocks that every farm had) handled things years ago. There were no mail-order chickens, no hybrids to speak of: everyone who aspired above the level of subsistence farmer selectively bred not just their chickens, but their sheep and their cattle and their horses and their turnips and their corn. Among animals, chickens were the easiest to work with, however, because of their size and the rapid cycling of generations.
Read the old farm books: the best were pre-WWII, when the emphasis shifted from home-based agriculture to industrial agriculture (My high-school Vocational Agriculture textbooks back in the 1960s were published by Dow Chemical). Practically all the chicken breeds we talk about now came about from breeding programs by family farmers. And family farmers who are interested (and by farmer, I have down-sized the definition considerably to include the typical member of this board) in reviving the chickens' original purpose--to provide a self-sustaining supply of eggs and meat and new chickens--can do it without re-inventing the wheel. HaikuHeritage has it exactly right.