Many of the so-called heritage breeds are nothing more than composites which could be re-created any day and any time. It is for this reason that I prefer to work on saving the original foundation breeds. The exception to this would be when a composite breed has within it's makeup foundation breeds which have already disappeared.I agree. I wonder how often this is the case for many of our standard breeds. Even before the commercial industry really began to develop.
Like rhode island whites for example. Were they ever really that popular? Or did the the breeds like Plymouth rocks, Rhode Island reds, and wyandottes dominate the then commercial industry so much and no one really paid much attention to the minor breeds, like Rhode Island whites, Javas, and Dorkings?
Same can be said of the egg industry with leghorns dominating that from a relatively early time period, were breeds like Campines, Anconas, and Andalusians more or less ignored?
To sum up, Have some "heritage" breeds been struggling for survival for longer than we might have thought? Or maybe I'm just off topic?
I don't intend to be gloomy here, but it's sometimes nice to have the perspective of what we are dealing with. And guess that's really why we're all here!
I have heard the arguement that if we lose a particular composite breed it can't really be recreated because we don't have the exactly bloodlines which were utilized to start with. Personally, I find that arguement ridiculously funny. What was so magical about those particular bloodlines? Nothing. They were chickens plain and simple.
Further, some of these so-called heritage breeds failed because they were not any better than the foundation breeds which went into their makeup to start with.