yup/
1. Get a top rooster for your best hatchery hen.
Take the best daughter, granddaughters and great granddaughters back to that top rooster.
2. Get the best hen you can for your hatchery rooster.
Breed the best son, grand son and great grandson back to that top hen.
By now your hens and roosters should be mostly the same genetics as the top rooster and top hen you started out with in the 1st generation. Yeah!
Now:
3. Finally, breed together the best great grandkids from the hen line and the rooster line.
If you have chosen wisely along the way, ( get help from a top breeder in your breed) by now you should have birds which can place at the shows. Congrats!
By this time you will know how your flock inherits traits and be able to make quality decisions about who to breed to whom.
Don't worry about inbreeding. Chickens have a very wide genetic base and many sex-linked genes. They can handle quite a bit of inbreeding without problems. Just don't double up on defects in the same generation. If one bird has a defect, make sure the bird you mate it to is correct in that trait and doesn't also carry that defect.
Best,
Karen
I read this thread with interest because this is exactly what I am planning to do -- introduce breeder-quality birds to my hatchery flock to get them going back toward the breed standard as proper dual-purpose chickens. I have 18 Delawares. My question is this:
If I acquire top birds from a breeder, why not just let them make a flock instead of breeding them into my hatchery stock? Is there any benefit to me/the flock by breeding the hatchery hen to the top rooster and the top hen to the hatchery rooster, etc, etc down the line? If I keep my hatchery birds separate, I could collect what eggs they give and let natural attrition deplete the flock while I build up the breeder flock, yes?