I want to tell you some of Faverolles history...I got my first bird when I went to the Lucasville swap meet and saw a rooster..I bought him as a lark because my husband has a full beard, but this fellow had personality and just had something special..I had been working only on Barred Rocks at the time. The guy who sold me the bird is someone I had never seen nor heard of since, the bird wasn't much on show. When I went to the Ohio National later that fall, Dave West had a couple of bantam pullets he had brought for someone who never showed up, so he sold them to me. Marie and Yvette; I bought a hen and 2 dozen eggs from Sharon Underwood to give me my small flock. Whatever that original rooster had in him, it was what gave me my champion line. Dave got his from one of the established breeders, Peter would know his name, I've long forgotten it.
I sent many birds and eggs west, to Michigan, to NY, to Florida...Ron Patterson's bantams came from me as did Mike Stapish's and Gayle Pontious'. I'm sure they also got birds from Dick Boulanger and Ed Willoughby to build their own lines. I sent eggs to Canada, sent them to every state on the mainland. My friend Jeff Oxley bantams from me and he's gotten birds from Ed Willoughby to give them a difference, and we trade cockerels on occasion to keep the birds from getting way to inbred. Showing bantams can be frustrating because the featherleg class is brutal...I was always up against Bill Bowman's brahmas, Kendra Aldrich's and Pat Lacey's cochins...and then the billions of silkies. When Bill died and Pat went in to judging, that freed things up a bit and I didn't see many brahmas or cochins, but it looks like they're back..The LF continental class isn't easy, but much easier than featherlegs..they only worry about Hamburgs and Polish, not lots of people have those.
Dick Boulanger and Peter Merlin are to be credited for keeping Faverolles on the map and making them competitive. The rest of us are benefiting from their hard work and promotion of the breed.