gjensen, I am not thinking negatively nor did I miss the point. In fact I agree with most of your concept. Utility breeding has a defined need for the homesteader. If you are striving for a good egg layer and a great tasty meat bird that also is good in all kinds of climates that has great immunity to disease and is robust then you just set your own S.O.P. for your goals and wants along with your needs. You have to create that population before you can move it forward. Continuous improvement is definitely moving the product, population, and production in the right direction. I'm following your concept but with a lot smaller numbers. By the way, I hatched out 28 crossbreed birds this spring. I am only in the creation mode and the selection has yet to begin.![]()
Utility requires vigor and more depth and numbers than a show string would. That is where everyone is missing the point. They are thinking short term, and based on what they have read from show folks.
A production flock requires real depth if they are going to be productive into a decade and more. It is not just improvement, but depth.
Bee complains about her show bird's hatchability and productivity, not realizing that much of it is due to small flocks bred tight for long periods. Not all, but the potential is revealed in an outcross and invigorated. There is always some improvement even after the initial spike in vigor.
Starting out like you are doing, there is no reason to hatch super large batches. When you cross two breeds that are consistent in type and performance on each side, the offspring (the results) will be consistent. You will only see variability as much as the parents are variable. A batch like you hatched is appropriate.
Now I understand that you intend another cross again, and the same principle would apply. The situation changes once you start breeding along a line. At that point you will need to maintain functional depth, and hatch enough qty. to maintain that functional depth. That depth includes variability (which is needed as they are tightened up, and that variability is more than visible), and vigor. Vigor has to be maintained, and that lesson is and will be learned the hard way. It only takes about five years before it starts to matter.
Now this brings us to outcrosses and breed crosses. This can be done perpetually, but it is not breeding with a goal. It is managing a production flock. Not creating one. It can be done for different reasons initially, but at some point you are working with what you have. You are not want to mess up what you have by bringing something new in all of the time. Outcrossing is a lot like starting over. Starting over repeatedly is no way to make progress. Trust me. I have started over one too many times.
So to conclude, at some point you are breeding along a line. You cannot hatch a lot in a season. No problem. Hatch according to small families per season. Allow more families and more males be your depth. The less hens we keep, the more males we need for depth.
If you can only hatch 32, only hatch 32, but only replace 4. Not 16. Replace a family of 4 hens, but not more. You will go backwards otherwise. Only replace a small family per cycle, and work along like that.
Hatching 28 and replacing 14 when past the cross breeding stage is not going to last long, and they will certainly remain average. Average is in the middle. The 6s are in the top percentile and 6s only produce 6s in a percentage. 6s do not produce all 6s LOL.