NYReds is absolutely correct. He knows what he's talking about on this subject, trust me. There is more to linebreeding properly than most folks understand. And if you cross two different strains/lines, you have no idea what that combination will do. It could be very, very bad or very good. And you won't know until you do it and see what happens over time.
I encountered dwarfism in my Delawares, not the kind where the bird is just small, but where it has a parrot beak, short legs, crooked toes and dies at a young age. I have since sold the hen responsible, but only after actual genetic testing of one of her daughters confirmed that she carried a double dwarf gene, something many don't even know exists. To look at her, you'd never suspect and to see her big, chunky daughter, you'd be hard pressed to believe she carried a double dwarf gene. There had never been any previously known, but there it was, staring us all in the face. So, you just never know what happens when you cross two different lines for the first time.
I encountered dwarfism in my Delawares, not the kind where the bird is just small, but where it has a parrot beak, short legs, crooked toes and dies at a young age. I have since sold the hen responsible, but only after actual genetic testing of one of her daughters confirmed that she carried a double dwarf gene, something many don't even know exists. To look at her, you'd never suspect and to see her big, chunky daughter, you'd be hard pressed to believe she carried a double dwarf gene. There had never been any previously known, but there it was, staring us all in the face. So, you just never know what happens when you cross two different lines for the first time.