i ask, you answer..good discussion...there is so much to learn for so many of us..I get a lot of good misinformation so I throw it out there...you have the experience out there to give appropriate answers... I do know what I like..I saw an old lithograph years ago of a blk orp..been searching for that bird ever since..classic type, sweet face and expression..I found some very close..they have a unique face for sure..the clevanger birds are big, it would stand to reason thier head would be in balance with that..big head bigger neck better gravey.....Oh yes Ive seen those big headed birds, im just not too big a braggard...Might even have a couple.The SOP says broad and deep for an Orp. Not big. Some dual purpose birds do have WIDE heads. I was talking about what I saw in the Cleavenger birds, not what the birds should have. More of a perception thing.
Btw: I don't believe everything I read even if it is old. I feel much safer using my own experience or asking someone else who has actually done some of this stuff.
The best layers are hybrids designed to lay only and to lay for a fairly brief time, so I don't know how that compares to anything that was said.
Walt

I get picked on by freinds a lot, they call me the easter bunny farmer..eat the eggs but not the culls..My freind and I traded some aussies couple years ago, he eats them on the grill the extra boys..he said gotta hand it to you Lynne, those birds had some good meat on them.he feeds them buttermilk oats corn and something else to prep for that.
your right the clevangers do look a little on the fat side or easy keeper..they probably got fat on a few grains every day..it was probably a cost saver..but the owner would have to watch it..
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