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If you are using splash to make goldenneck, you WANT the washed out splash with few to no splashes. I would tend to think you would not want to mix your golden necks with your blue mille fleurs. However, I am not a d'uccle breeder.
Sonoran, that's what I was wondering, are Goldnecks splash blue MF's, or are golden necks like my daffy the result of using splash to develop gold necks or neither? Daffy has no blue, he is definitely a gold neck, and I plan to breed him to only other gold necks.
lilcrow, Thanks for the compliment. I think Daffy is probably the most beautiful chicken I have. Often, visitors to my place try to buy him, but I won't part with him. (His full name is Daffodil. lol We named him before we knew he was a he.)
Blue mille fleur can be made with splash or with dominant white. If with splash, you want a washed out white--you do not want the blue to show as blue or as blue with splashing; you want it to show as white. The splash will not wash out the gold in the bird; only the black/blue, and for golden neck that is what you want. A golden neck should look like a mille fleur with all black pigment replaced by white: it is a golden and white bird.
The blue gene dilutes whatever eumelanin (black pigment) is present on the bird. One copy dilutes to blue; two copies dilute to splash. Dominant white works differently, but it replaces all black pigment with the lack of pigment (white).
If you are using splash to make goldenneck, you WANT the washed out splash with few to no splashes. I would tend to think you would not want to mix your golden necks with your blue mille fleurs. However, I am not a d'uccle breeder.
Sonoran, that's what I was wondering, are Goldnecks splash blue MF's, or are golden necks like my daffy the result of using splash to develop gold necks or neither? Daffy has no blue, he is definitely a gold neck, and I plan to breed him to only other gold necks.
lilcrow, Thanks for the compliment. I think Daffy is probably the most beautiful chicken I have. Often, visitors to my place try to buy him, but I won't part with him. (His full name is Daffodil. lol We named him before we knew he was a he.)
Blue mille fleur can be made with splash or with dominant white. If with splash, you want a washed out white--you do not want the blue to show as blue or as blue with splashing; you want it to show as white. The splash will not wash out the gold in the bird; only the black/blue, and for golden neck that is what you want. A golden neck should look like a mille fleur with all black pigment replaced by white: it is a golden and white bird.
The blue gene dilutes whatever eumelanin (black pigment) is present on the bird. One copy dilutes to blue; two copies dilute to splash. Dominant white works differently, but it replaces all black pigment with the lack of pigment (white).