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I have gold toned girls and have bred them and they have recreated more gold toned females. I currently have 4 golden girls in both dark gold and lighter gold. I have one that fooled me for quite a bit but she is gold even if she may have 1 ig gene. It is very hard to describe what I see unless folks have seen it for themselves. I started off with 2 different colored females - 1 with cream hackles from Feb 2012 and one with gold hackles from October 2011. I had one male that was light enough for me to assume he was carrying cream (2011) 1 or 2 ig genes I could not tell you, and a second that was more colorful (2012) but with better type. I knew even less about genetics then so I made my best guesses and started reading. I did not assume in any way that my birds are silver... 1) there was no reason to 2) if there were silver birds around in those earlier birds we would not have so many gold birds from that time and 3) In breeding my gold girl to my lighter rooster I still ended up with darker and lighter gold birds as opposed to any silver looking offspring, male or female as they'd need 2 ig or silver. I was able to get birds that looked pretty much like the second lighter female when she was bred and then when that was bred they pretty much had the same color tones.
I have a hackle color in my pullets and hackle and saddle color in my roosters that runs consistent. I have issues with melanizers that may cloud the issue for others when looking at the birds especially if they have not bred them.
I have no desire to DNA test my birds....
Have I tested or do I intend to test breed my birds specifically for silver? No. This is just a hobby for me so that would be a complete waste of time and money for me personally. I'd rather buy more shoes to add to my collection of about 90 or so pairs and spend my free time on a variety of things.
The questions make sense but they ask to assume something is amiss in the lighter color when there was no reason to do so as this idea of some sort of prevalent silver gened Legbar just seems to be more myth than fact. If I had listened to those around me at the time I could have ignored my own research and intuition and bred the gold forward but chose to ignore the alternate voices here on BYC and instead did follow the UK standard and put color and type as both primary and bred the cream colored birds forward. If more folks could see what they look like they would not call them silver and if they could compare them ... well... anyway, I know I don't have silver gene birds but for those that like the gold birds, prefer them or have them this idea is just hard to put to rest as this question has been put forth to me before or implied. The work I would have to do to prove to others that they are not silver is more than I care or intend to do to satisfy that question for some.