Do you mean Hard and Soft feathered fowl? A soft feathered fowl can also be close feathered.Originally Posted by Robert Blosl
My hope by starting this thread is pick ten breeds of rare chickens study them and put them in order of importance of value worth fooling with. Then if you find three breeds worth working with try to find the best line of that breed you can locate and hope you can hook up with that breeder for guidance.
Having a breed and hatching them each year ,but not improving them wont help the breed.
Just for the fun of it, what breeds have you been thinking about to help and rebuild?????????????????????
Just my thoughts. Bob
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Hi Bob,
I'm a real historical purist. First in collies, now in Poultry. I wanted to raise up the Golden Salmon Marans (wildtype) here in the US but that didn't happen. So after searching around for another breed, I've decided I want to breed Sussex the English way. Have settled on Light Sussex, forgoing any Aussie influence. I know Greenfire didn't mean to cause problems in the variety but things are kinda messy right now with the breed type differences between US and Aussie lines. Esp. with folk thinking "bigger is better" and not understanding the difference between close-feathered and soft-feathered fowl. I think Light Sussex in the US could really profit from a good dose of Sussex bred the historic English way.
Best,
Karen in western PA, USA
All close feathering means is that the fowl holds it feathering close to the body, Hard and Soft describes the "structure" of the feather. For the most part Hard feathered fowl are game type fowl.
A Sussex would be a Soft Feathered fowl that hold it's feathers close to the body.
Chris