Hi Stake--
Yea, another CL breeder.
regarding what I had said---somewhere I heard research that chickens can be "inbred" for something like 17 or 20-generations and not suffer ill effects. also within the last 6-months my views have shifted. What Rinda wrote reflects it. Definitely a father-daughter or mother-son pairing - is NOT frowned upon. In fact I am strategizing a mother-son pairing right now---just wondering when would be a good time to have the chicks hatch - since summer is upon us.
Remember this too, it required some brother-sister pairings way back in the day to establish some of the breeds maybe even CLs.
My big, big concern about brothers and sisters is my Isbars. According to GFF - at one time there were only 200 Isbars left. I believe that Isbars as a breed, for that reason have really close genetics. For me it really shows uniformity in the breed...they are very recognizable -- I can tell that the ones I have here are related. They are fabulous at laying lots of pretty green eggs that are a saturated green, and they have a great personality and demeanor... Signs of inbreeding IMO for Isbars are that they tend to be rather small, I think that chick hatches from some of my friends that have Isbars are not - real high percentages, like Legbars - and the chicks that do hatch (so I am told) have trouble standing...and some die and some need to be put down. My Isbar hens look so alike - and they almost move in sync...I think that they even lay their daily egg within a few hours of each other..One that is a bit smaller than her sisters, has a cross beak or almost a cross beak - I could probably take an emery board and fully correct her defect .With the limited knowledge I have of inbreeding, I would kind of attribute these things to genetic weakness. Sooo I have a gorgeous Isbar blue rooster..he is a knock-out - but I don't want to breed him to his sisters...but then someone told me today that there will be a poultry sale here in town this weekend...so maybe I can find him a new home....
Cream Legbars, on the other hand seem very diverse in appearance, and tightening up the genetics and thus appearance would probably help the breed overall.
What you want to do is find Good examples and replicate those good genetics -- that is where the skill will lie.
Cream Legbars are different, Greenfire farms brought genetic diversity over by importing multiple lines. -- The fact that you have one that is without a crest shows that you don't have identical genetics running around your place.
Yea, another CL breeder.

regarding what I had said---somewhere I heard research that chickens can be "inbred" for something like 17 or 20-generations and not suffer ill effects. also within the last 6-months my views have shifted. What Rinda wrote reflects it. Definitely a father-daughter or mother-son pairing - is NOT frowned upon. In fact I am strategizing a mother-son pairing right now---just wondering when would be a good time to have the chicks hatch - since summer is upon us.
Remember this too, it required some brother-sister pairings way back in the day to establish some of the breeds maybe even CLs.
My big, big concern about brothers and sisters is my Isbars. According to GFF - at one time there were only 200 Isbars left. I believe that Isbars as a breed, for that reason have really close genetics. For me it really shows uniformity in the breed...they are very recognizable -- I can tell that the ones I have here are related. They are fabulous at laying lots of pretty green eggs that are a saturated green, and they have a great personality and demeanor... Signs of inbreeding IMO for Isbars are that they tend to be rather small, I think that chick hatches from some of my friends that have Isbars are not - real high percentages, like Legbars - and the chicks that do hatch (so I am told) have trouble standing...and some die and some need to be put down. My Isbar hens look so alike - and they almost move in sync...I think that they even lay their daily egg within a few hours of each other..One that is a bit smaller than her sisters, has a cross beak or almost a cross beak - I could probably take an emery board and fully correct her defect .With the limited knowledge I have of inbreeding, I would kind of attribute these things to genetic weakness. Sooo I have a gorgeous Isbar blue rooster..he is a knock-out - but I don't want to breed him to his sisters...but then someone told me today that there will be a poultry sale here in town this weekend...so maybe I can find him a new home....
Cream Legbars, on the other hand seem very diverse in appearance, and tightening up the genetics and thus appearance would probably help the breed overall.
What you want to do is find Good examples and replicate those good genetics -- that is where the skill will lie.
Cream Legbars are different, Greenfire farms brought genetic diversity over by importing multiple lines. -- The fact that you have one that is without a crest shows that you don't have identical genetics running around your place.