Bovans Browns

LisaFoster

In the Brooder
7 Years
Oct 23, 2012
26
1
24
Batesville, Arkansas
I recently purchased eight chickens called Bovans Browns from some FHA students. They each lay a large brown egg on a daily basis. I couldn't be more pleased. I know they are a hybrid, I just don't know what the parents are. I've tried looking this up, to no avail. Does anyone on here know what they breed together to get this wonderful chicken?
 
The Bovan is a hybrid, but more to that, they are a strain of commercial layers that have been selectively bred for decades. The parent stock is a Red rooster line (heavy on RIR and Brown Leghorn, most likely) and a white hen line, which is heavy on silver/white laying strains, likely including traces of White Leghorn, White Sussex, etc.

You simply cannot know, as commercial hens are bred from privately held, proprietary stock. They really aren't a "breed" anymore, not even the parent stock.

Bovan is now part of the European poultry genetics giant which includes Hendrix, ISA and many other names. Google the company's website, but there's no information that ever disclose the mixes uses in these proprietary breeding flocks.
 
BTW, when folks buy from feed stores and various hatcheries and order RSLs. Chances are very, very good that their Cinnamon Queens, Golden Comets and similarly named birds, are simply one of the various Bovan, Hendrix, DeKalb, Tetra, Hy-Sex or other commercial bird, renamed, of course, with a nifty name for marketing reasons.

Yes, they are docile, friendly and wonderful birds. This personality trait admired by backyarders was created in the bird primarily for the caged layer industry.
 
I find it amazing they have so many different means to the same end. I guess diversity is good, but it's weird how they can come at it from so many different angles.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom