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At this point I am set up with one major pen, a large coop in which the birds are locked at night; we had chickens stolen from it several years ago, it's pretty darned secure now with some extra secret weapons I don't talk about in public.
This is surrounded by about half an acre of electric poultry netting in which the birds day range. They love to hide in the trees and bushes, and seek out bugs, snakes, mice, anything that isn't nailed down they eat.
I also have several smaller pens with younger birds in them, and have two friends locally who also have my bloodlines in the event we are hit by thieves again, so we won't be completely out of birds. But my main breeders are all in the one big pen. Three cock birds with about 24 hens. About 60 youngsters who will, after the first cull, go into "The Big Coop" as we call it.
So as to your cock bird question, I don't (at this time) know which male is responsible for which chicks. I wish I had the wherewithal to create separate breeding pens, but we're actually cutting back these days a bit (selling out of all but Buckeyes) as our older daughter is going off to college this fall, and we'll be shy one chore hand and a lot of $$ to pay for tuition.
IRT what my purpose in crossing Brown to ALBC, well, when I started I got my Brown birds from Matt John, and wanted more! Matt got badly hit in a flood in '07, and lost about 70% of all his birds, several hundred were just washed away. So I contacted Don Schrider at the ALBC who sent me hatching eggs, and from there I was off!
And while I've only had Buckeyes since 2006, I've had poultry since 2000, and my family has had poultry since before the early 1900s. That's part of what drew me to the Buckeyes in the first place, I am originally from OH, and my grandfather loved to carry a Buckeye nut in his pockets, there is a large Buckeye tree in the front yard of his house on the farm (which I now own part of with other relatives.) You can see some pics of the farm from the 30s and 40s here:
http://www.pathfindersfarm.com/BKF.html
Hope that answers some of your questions. Was your grandfathers stallion a American Saddlebred? He looks to be with that high arching neck.