Because of the sun, my colored birds look cream right now 

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I had said that I would put in some multiple rooster coloration too---
Here is the first pass for that:
Lightest - Hatched in March
Youngest - and most colorful - hatched in May-- (mine tend to lighten as they age)
Eldest of the cockerels hatched in Apiril -
I think all would be designated as crele.
This is the real question/turning point -- and I think it may be a bit of time before we can get the answer -- I agree with the evals of the roosters...One thing brought up by a Judge at the Dallas show was that we would need to make sure that a second variety was distinctly different from the Cream. I thought I would post a cockerel that might be a good candidate for Crele roo. He is still pretty young--I can't remember when he hatched but I am thinking that he is 14-15 weeks.
Crele boy on the left , Cream boy on the right (21 weeks)
Crele boy in the front, different (least chestnut enhanced) Cream boy in the back (21 weeks)
For another comparison, my darkest (meaning most melanized Cream boy, hatch mate to the other 2 Cream roos shown) at 19 weeks:
So when I am looking at the difference between the Cream (white/light wing triangle), and Crele (gold barred wing triangle) I can see a very distinct difference between the boys. Although hard to pick up the subtleties in the photos, the saddles are distinctly different colors with the gold being browner/gold, the red/chestnut is much richer in the Crele and the hackles are also a gold/brassy color although this is much more subtle. The big question is how will this sit with the APA? Enough of a difference?
ETA - so to differentiate the varieties, a judge could open the wings and look for a possible third color - as shown here if you open that wing shot in a full page window..... Perhaps that is too much fine tuning for the APA to differentiate. Add to that if a rooster is 'boarder-line' on coloration as that one possibly IS, does that make it really really difficult for a judge?Chickat. Nice group of boys to look at, although it looks like you have the same problem that I have--getting them to settle down long enough to get a still shot. Most of my pictures end up being a running pose. From the Back. As they run away!. I cant really tell the wing triangle on the last one. Do you think he is Ig/ig or ig/ig? He actually looks like he could be ig/ig in this photo.
That was the day he ran away-- into the woods, and I thought I wouldn't see him again - but got him back in the afternoon. LOL
His yellow legs are behind the wings---so it is a bit difficult - but I think that there is more than just light and dark gray in his wings...so I think that he wouldn't qualify as 'cream' certainly to some people...LOL -- you may have to right click to see photo enlarged.......by opening in a new tab or window.
I think you have brought up some very important things for us to look at and moving forward with the alternative standard. Your roos are a bit lighter than what is traditionally thought of as Crele by the APA. I think that Cream Legbars in England were bred with an intention of having both Ig and ig birds conform to the standard which over time has made the non-ig/ig ones appear lighter and closer to the Cream Standard. We may need to breed away from the lighter non-ig/ig ones in the new variety so there is a better difference in color. I think it would be hard for a judge to look at your lightest one and at a glance know for sure which variety he would belong in. I see that he has more positive white in the tail. I wonder if that is a tell showing that the birds have more white (or rather less melanizers) in their genetic make up and making it harder to tell whether they are diluted by ig. So perhaps wording in the new standard limiting the amount of white in the sickles and wings?
Perhaps - but all mine have white in the sickles.. I think that my males are (according to the skulls) fairly prepotent - and that is a trait that will be inherited - along with a LOT of the others---the sons seem to replicate the roosters farily closely.
The other important thing you brought up is that the birds do lighten over time. I pulled up my rooster Barnaby from last years hatch and then a recent photo of him a year later to see the difference. It is quite remarkable how much lighter he has become over time. If this trend is for all Legbars, it would really prove to be problematic for color differentiation. And may also be a reason why some of the birds are IMO way too light when I look at them. They started out perfect but really faded and I am merely seeing that fade. On that idea that you want a bird to by at 12 o'clock when you show him--Barnaby is so far past 12, he is on about hours 22 on a 24 hour clock:
LOL - Barnaby is really light in the photo of his 1-year birthday. Usually the males I have get darker breasts at about 1-year too...so it could be that for CLs their adult plumage comes in at 1-year....and that would make the cockerels in a show and the roosters divergent. A good thing. Barnaby is so light that he could qualify for the 'police' standards I'm certain. One thing I question with a rooster of that appearance is if it is truly the Ig-genetics that differ or if it is something else like the S-locus or the E-locus - or perhaps no autosomal red at all??
Barnaby in Front this September--he is exactly 1 year old here (along with June 1st hatch cockerel who is marked a lot like Barnaby was 6 months ago). He's starting his molt so his sickles are gone.
Here he is on the left this April (6 months earlier). His breast was much darker, his hackle and saddle feathers were richer (they were obvious cream but now look off-white), he had obvious chestnut in his wings which has totally disappeared by September.
So looking at one picture can really be deceiving about what the rooster's genetics are! I am starting to think that there is a window from 4-8 months that will be a demonstration of what the birds natural color is and that after that, the environment will really modify the apparent colors and make them less reliable to 'read' the bird. In my situation, I live at about 5,000 feet and get over 300 days of sun a year, so while I get sunburned and turn red and gold, my chickens get fade to white in the light!
That is so interesting too, because my chickens will get more golden on the white feathers....my BPRs turned from black and white to mahogany and what I would call cream, perhaps some would call buff... It seems to happen all at once too -- right at the end of summer.....very strange....tough too - because it is their old feathers. I have one rooster now in molt that is multi-colored in the hackle.
I thought that tail feathers were the last part of molt-- which would make Barnaby's feathers his new feathers.... It is really confusing. We need to dig into this a lot deeper. Thanks so much for posting the comparatives of Barnaby-- you could almost think it was two different roosters based on color. I realize that we are dealing with the handicap of photos, lighting conditions etc...But there is a big contrast.
Like others here -- FMP for example - I think if I had one get as light as Barnaby ( at one year old) - I would pass him along to someone who wants to breed for the lightest...and I would keep the ones that look more like Barnaby at 6-months.
sorry to be absent from the threads-- I was traveling - and then got sick -- ilch.... But trying to get caught up now. :O)
Hi!Because of the sun, my colored birds look cream right now![]()
Hi All,
catching up on my reading and some quick comments.
ROOSTERS
The visual differences that stand out for me are:
the cream (white) vs crele (gold) wing triangles - that's an easy tell for DQ at a show
cream - matching hackle and saddle feathers, with allowance for a range from white to buttery
crele - mismatched hackle and saddle feathers, with substantially darker saddle feathers [GD26] - Think these need to match on crele birds too.![]()
crele - substantial ginger/chestnut across back