- Nov 28, 2010
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Hit submit too soon.
Now, I may have the words "strain and "line" backwards as to how you are using them, but my point is that to claim you have either requires a little bit more than simply tossing a "roo" in with a hen and hatching off a chick. To me, creating a line or strain requires breeding with some foresight and planning, and, while you might say you have "started" a line with your very first chick, that does not mean that first chick is a "line"or "strain" or in any meaningful way different (better or worse) than the original birds 21 days before. Maybe when you are selecting the breeders from "that* chick's offspring, you're on your way to creating a line.(depends on how well one is able to breed and cull with a goal in mind)
Like I said, there are people who have been breeding purebred poultry for years, even decades, and they do not now, nor will they ever have anything that is recognizable as being uniquely "theirs". Their flock is no different from any other random bred group of birds of the same breed.
(and respectfully no, IMHO, it is not at all like a random group of guppies breeding in a fish tank)

Now, I may have the words "strain and "line" backwards as to how you are using them, but my point is that to claim you have either requires a little bit more than simply tossing a "roo" in with a hen and hatching off a chick. To me, creating a line or strain requires breeding with some foresight and planning, and, while you might say you have "started" a line with your very first chick, that does not mean that first chick is a "line"or "strain" or in any meaningful way different (better or worse) than the original birds 21 days before. Maybe when you are selecting the breeders from "that* chick's offspring, you're on your way to creating a line.(depends on how well one is able to breed and cull with a goal in mind)
Like I said, there are people who have been breeding purebred poultry for years, even decades, and they do not now, nor will they ever have anything that is recognizable as being uniquely "theirs". Their flock is no different from any other random bred group of birds of the same breed.
(and respectfully no, IMHO, it is not at all like a random group of guppies breeding in a fish tank)