Quote: But there are no production standards - Sure sites say the should lay XXX amount of eggs per year. But breeding for production is way harder than breeding for phenotype. You can easily judge a bird based on it's phenotype. But there it takes a good set of hands to judge for production traits. And you can have great production from pure bred stock if bred correctly. The physicality of the bird in terms of feathers has little to do with production - So I guess what I don't get is why do we judge birds on it. It makes no sense. Chickens are livestock - not dogs or cats.
There was a comparison done with dog breeds from 100 years ago and dog breeds today side by side the difference was shocking, and really makes you stop and think.... I wish I could find it now but I can't
I'll keep an eye on this thread, too. I want my birds to look nice, but they have to produce or I can't afford to keep them!
Kathleen
I'm in !!
While I love trying to understand the SOP, I ultimately have the birds for eggs and meat. ANd all the hatchery stock has been very poor on the meat capacity, which is what I expected. Decent layers but . . . . . I'm looking for something else.
DOgs-- I saw a comparison of a breed think it was a bull dog painted about 1890-1900 and a puiture today and I almost fell off my chair. I then understood why one shep breed does NOT allow the animals to become show sheep as production is the focus. As for chickens, MR Reese has NH which are a production line for meat.
For me production of eggs needs to be year round-- we go thru withdrawls when the girls stop laying in the fall and we are reduced to buying eggs from the store. . . . they sure are not like the eggs our girls produce!!
OP thanks for starting the thread!