When we were talking about hatching a hundred birds from a mating to get a couple of good ones, they technically wouldn't have to be hatched all in the same year right?
I'll explain what I am thinking "ROOKIE BOB" said it was a easy as a great male and a couple of hens single mated. Ok, so you hatch 30 chicks. Pick the best male and female from each female, to keep, but only use the exact same mating the second year. So the thirty chicks you hatch the second year, are siblings to the ones hatched the first year. So now I have hatched 60 chicks off that mating. Even though they are from a different year they are the same generation right?
After a few years of that pick the best male from one female and the best two females from the other, and mate half sibs. If a little guy used the same mating for maybe 3 years it would take a lot longer for the genetics to get too close, I mean, I would think, I don't really know though. what do you think?