Great Question.
The Cream Legbar was developed first and foremost to be practical - and then whimsical. Autosexing is the most valuable trait of the CL - We get kind of spoiled knowing right away what sex the chick is -- and it seems odd to read in other threads how the mystery must unfold. Sadly in the UK some of their lines of birds have "lost their autosexing"
http://poultrykeeper.com/chicken-breeds/legbar-chickens
the site states: "many Crean Legbars have lost their autosexing qualities." --( The paragraph right before BOOKS at the bottom. ) This, and the differentiation of egg color from the original 1950's entry into the SOP where only blue eggs are mentioned,
to the subsequent inclusion of green and olive eggs in the UKlead me to wonder exactly what misadventures were going on over there...![]()
So my view is that if those traits were "lost" as the poultry keeper listing states, it would be a giant disservice to the breed. If someone sold me a CL that didn't produce blue or green eggs and the chicks weren't autosexing....![]()
Punnett added the crest and the blue eggs - perhaps because he could - making a separation of the blue-egg genetics and the pea comb.... ( In the UK the Araucanas are crested in two varities or tufted and not rumpless like the USA version.) I think that some in the UK perhaps working to get other things into the bird -- who knows what -- did diminish the autosexing -- and added a new egg color. It would be interesting to see when the Poultry Club of Great Britain changed the SOP to add olive to the egg color.
So it was intended to be practical, useful while at the same time unique - a perfect bird for the small flock - and perfect for people who cannot have roosters in their environment.
If it isn't autosexing, and blue egg laying it isn't a Cream Legbar. (IMO) --
I agree completely. I've tried to find out when 'olive' was added to the Brit SOP, but haven't been successful... yet.
If it isn't autosexing, and blue egg laying it isn't a Cream Legbar (IMO)
IMO, too. Those 2 traits are, or are supposed to be, the 2 most important traits that define and differentiate the Cream Legbar (and the crest
