This whole process is really interesting. Could you elaborate on the approval process?I think perhaps part of any controversy is that one coloration needs to be selected to obtain recognition by the American Poultry Association (APA) - since the APA requires a detailed description of the bird, and coloration is part of that detailed description, one color has to be settled on as the Standard of Perfection. For the most part, the USA is modeling on the SOP used in the UK, which has been derived from the one that R.C. Punnett himself used to get the birds recognized as a breed. So the coloration described is the classical coloration from Punnett. Without recognition by the APA, a bird in the USA isn't a breed. (Or officially isn't a breed)--- in the UK it is a breed because it has been recognized. This would matter most in the showing arena.
It sounds like from what you've said that to get a breed initially approved, you go with one type only. But there are many breeds with many different color variants approved. Did those breeds start by getting one color adopted, then add others later? How does that work?
Thanks very much for your wisdom!
Last edited: