If you can find it, I recommend Creative Poultry Breeding by WC Carefoot. I found it via interlibrary loan.
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I'm trying to keep this all straight in my brain here, lol. When you say this are we talking about a chocolate male or chocolate female?If you do a cross of chocolate (solid) to black mottled, then take a son and cross him back to the black mottled line, you should get:
--half of chicks are male. You can't tell which of them carry chocolate, so don't use them for breeding.
--half of chicks are female. Of them, half are chocolate. Of the chocolate ones, half will show mottling and the other half will not. (So chocolate mottled females are about 1 in 8 of the chicks you hatched.)
I'm going to come back to all of this, as I am definitely interested in continuing this conversation but I have a ton of chores to do at the moment. Will be back later this evening. So- IF I have the ability to work from several pens at once and could source any bird I needed to what would you suggest as game plan to make things as simple and as quick as they can be. Meaning if I have to bring in colors/patterns from other breeds. Obviously it would be much faster to just find birds that were already these colors or close to it. At this point I am growing out a clutch of 16 cochin bantams. Their rooster was mottled, no hen was mottled, so they should be carrying it recessively. So far I have blue, black, and some splash (black and blue splash) chicks. As well as one odd ball that I think may be partridge but I'm not sure. The adults that I have here now are a blue/red roo, a splash roo, and a lighter MF roo. I have access to MF d'uccle hatching eggs, and MF bantam Cochin chicks. I probably could also get a chocolate silkie rooster, maybe a hen or st run chicks. I have 20 st run LF chocolate Orpington now. The goal right now is create blue/silver MF, chocolate/silver MF, and some mottled birds in chocolate and blue. Seriously considering a project on the double lacing from silver barnevelders on a Cochin Bantam too.Yes, they would be beautiful! Genetically speaking, it is much easier to breed solid-colored chickens than to breed good quality laced ones.
I'm not sure if there are a different number of genes involved, or if the real difference is that solid colors do fine if you go to extremes (there is no such thing as "too much black" on a solid black chicken, or "too much white" on a solid white chicken.) Laced chickens only look good with the right amount of black in the right places, so they have to strike a balance between "too much black" and "too little black," plus having the black in the right places with the right shapes.
I am sure it could be done, just a bit more difficult than some other ideas.
You should be able to get Millefleur patterned chickens with Silver, and they can have black markings or blue markings but not both on the same chicken. Due to how the blue gene works, it would be easy to have both versions in the same flock.
It will partly depend on how many chicks you hatch in each generation. Two generations is the absolute minimum, but it could easily take three or four or more generations if you are working on many traits at once and hatch small numbers of chicks. Hatching large numbers of chicks in the second and third generation will speed things up quite a bit, because the smallest of 4 chicks is likely to be bigger than the smallest of 100 chicks (you see more different re-combinations of the size genes in the bigger group of chicks.)
If you cross a large rooster with bantam hens, the chicks will be small at hatch, because they have grown in a bantam-size egg. They will probably grow to be middle-sized at maturity, because half of their genes come from a large chicken and half come from a bantam.
When you breed one of those mixed chicks back to a bantam, for each gene that affects size, the mixed chicken can give either the large size or the bantam size one to a chick, and it can give the same gene or the other gene to the next chick. This happens for each of several genes controlling size. I do not know how many genes are actually involved, but the more chicks you hatch, the more chance you have of getting a few that have just "small" genes and no "large" genes. It is quite similar to how the chocolate, mottling, mille fleur pattern genes work: to get all the right genes in one chicken is rather unlikely, but if you hatch a large number of chicks you might get lucky.
As a practical matter, I would probably do something like this:
--cross the chocolate large fowl with a Mille Fleur Bantam
--Either breed a son to a Mille Fleur and keep chocolate daughters (1/4 of the chicks hatched)
--Or breed a daughter to a Mille Fleur and keep any son (1/2 of chicks hatched)
Among those "chocolate daughters" or "any son," look for small size, mottling, and the Mille Fleur pattern rather than mottling on black. Pick the best comination you can, and breed back to the Mille Fleur Bantam again. (This is the other half of the male/female alternating pattern for getting chocolate in the bantams.) Each generation you should be able to get a few more traits right. Once you have the mottling, every later generation will have mottling. Once you have the Mille Fleur pattern (instead of mottling on black or chocolate), you will have that pattern in all later generations. Once you are free of a specific gene for large size, that gene will not pop up to bother you again later.
So you certainly can work on everything at once. There are times when it is easier to hatch more chicks and try to pick one with a better set of traits. There are other times when it is easier and overall faster to raise up a chick with some of the right traits and go on to the next generation. You can change up strategies along the way, too: raise a chick that has chocolate but no mottling, while hatching more of the same cross to see if you do get one with chocolate and mottling. Or raise a big chick with chocolate and mottling, while hatching more to see if you get a smaller one with chocoalte and mottling. Or whatever other trait combinations you have.
Of course you will also be trying to get the right amount of leg feathering, correct body shape, and so forth. Repeatedly breeding back to the existing bantams, if they are good quality, will gradually "fix" most of those isssues, because each time you elminate a wrong gene from your breeding group, that gene will stay gone unless you re-introduce it. So you might get rid of non-mottling or big size or non-feathered feet in various different generations.
I was using Mille Fleur Bantam as the example here, meaning Mille Fleur color of Cochin Bantam. If you do not have access to them, the breeding plan shifts a little bit, depending on what you do have access to. I have been assuming Bantam Cochins of one color or another (solid black, or black with white mottling, or Mille Fleur color.) That means you are mostly dealing with color genes (which are easy to see and talk about), rather than large changes in body shape (like if you use d'Uccles to get the Mille Fleur color.)
Actually, if you want smaller size, and don't have access to Mille Fleur Cochins, you could use some Mille Fleur d'Uccles in your project. Muff/beard is caused by just one gene (can be gone in two generations), but you would probably have a lot of work to do on the body type and I don't know how many genes are involved in that.
For that exact example, it does not matter whether the original chocolate chicken is male or female.I'm trying to keep this all straight in my brain here, lol. When you say this are we talking about a chocolate male or chocolate female?
That sounds familiar. Discussions like this can be great fun, but sometimes other parts of life get in the wayI'm going to come back to all of this, as I am definitely interested in continuing this conversation but I have a ton of chores to do at the moment.
So- IF I have the ability to work from several pens at once and could source any bird I needed to what would you suggest as game plan to make things as simple and as quick as they can be. Meaning if I have to bring in colors/patterns from other breeds. Obviously it would be much faster to just find birds that were already these colors or close to it.
I would like put together a clear plan for my project and set it up in a way that I am working on several aspects at once to shorten the overall length of time it takes to complete.
The goal right now is create blue/silver MF, chocolate/silver MF, and some mottled birds in chocolate and blue. Seriously considering a project on the double lacing from silver barnevelders on a Cochin Bantam too.
Is that MF roo a Cochin or a d'Uccle?The adults that I have here now are a blue/red roo, a splash roo, and a lighter MF roo.
A cochinHmm, interesting puzzle.
Is that MF roo a Cochin or a d'Uccle?
In that case:A cochin
I think you can use these to get Blue/silver Mille Fleur Cochin bantams, and mottled birds in blue. I would get some of the Mille Fleur bantam Cochin chicks.At this point I am growing out a clutch of 16 cochin bantams. Their rooster was mottled, no hen was mottled, so they should be carrying it recessively. So far I have blue, black, and some splash (black and blue splash) chicks....The adults that I have here now are... a lighter MF roo. I have access to... MF bantam Cochin chicks.
Check out my farm pageWould love to hear what everyones favorite resources and books are on gaining knowledge about breeding poultry and their genetics. I am in interested in several breeds and would like to learn about breeding to the SOP,, for production, and how all the genetics work and interact with each other. Thanks in advance