After a week of diligent reading I have finally caught up on the CLBWG thread. I have two pages of notes, but don't even know where to start.
hmm?
First, thank you Nicalandia for your post on the differences between Gold, Golden, and Silver as well as the information on Autosomal red, Mahogany, and Chestnut. I have been trying to figure this stuff out for over a year and that is by far the clearest information I have seen.
Next, I would like to see some similar discussion on
Body Type. The terms up-right, stilty, light, heavy, wedge shaped, etc. have been thrown out, but if someone that has a good handle on the definitions of the description in the British SOP could do a photo comparison of what is wedge shaped and what isn't as well as these other terms that I know I for one would greatly benefit.
Autosexing
1) Good: Pullets with chipmunk stripes and eye liner that can be distinguished from the cockerels at day one
2) Better: Above plus pullets with wide straight stripes
3) Best: Above plus pullets with out white spots on their head
We need to keep in mind that people can really only work on one thing in their line at a time. It might be counter productive to require the "best" on very small point because that could eliminate breeders that excel in bigger areas (i.e. cream color plumage, egg color, production, body type, cresting, shank color, eye color, etc.).
Single Barred Males
This is NOT a problem in the GFF bloodlines. In the past 12 months I have not heard a single instant in which anyone has received a single barred or miss sexed Cream Legbar shipped from GFF.
Breed Name
I think that everyone can agree that the non-crested white egg laying Gold and Silver Legbars and a separate breed from the Cream Legbar. I really like the idea of using the name
Crested Legbar in the USA. That way we have a Crested Cream Legbar that is true to the Historical name and legacy of the Cream Legbar and leaves things open for a Crested White Legbar, Crested Gold Legbar, etc. in the future (not now...let's just work on the Crested Cream Legbar)
Note: Since I kept the non-crested white egg laying Gold Legbars in my flock before I got Cream Legbars I already use the term Crested legbar in my flock book so I can log which of my Cream Legars have gold plumage and which have cream plumage with out confusing them with my white egg laying birds which are a different breed in my mind.
Okay...so I am not too long winded just two more points (I have a dozen more in my notes, but I have two ears and just one mouth so it is probably good to do half as much talking as I did listening)
Purity
Greenfire farm gave us the clay to work with and dumped it in our hands to mold. They don't specialize in the molding part and in most instances would rather spend their efforts importing the next breed than spending 5+ years trying to finish off the one they imported last year. We have good lines and will discover what is in them as we start to work with them just like we would with any line of chickens that we start with that has already been in the USA for 100 yeas. This one may have more work required, but not nearly as much as some newly imported breeds (i.e. look at the SOP for Basque Hens and where we currently are with the breed in North America).
Last Point,
Breed History
Yes, I volunteered to work on this last week with a few other people. We are coordinating this effort through email and PM's. Since most of us were already members of the Yahoo Cream Legbars Breeders group and that site was offered to the CLBWG as a location to post files some of the History reference had been posted there. This is not a duplicated effort. We will give periodic up-dates to Laingcroft and Redchicken9 our progress. If anyone else want to help with the history, we are still looking for someone with good phone skill to contact people in the UK that we only have physical addresses and telephone numbers for (but we will take people without phone skills too). Just send me a PM and we will add you to our communications and put you to work.
