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WOW!!
The chicken did mind the bath?
How did you do this?
I would love to give mine a bath.
BTW that is one huge bird, how old is it?
I bought my birds from a hatchery. They were sold to me as CornishX's, are you saying they are not a cornishX?
Or are you saying the hatchery I bought them from was not an actual Hatchery?
Furthermore, if the "actual" hatcheries call them "Ross708" or "Arbor Acres Plus" and not CornishX's. Logic would dictate we are able to call ours CornishX's as the hatcheries do not.....
BTW if they have an iota of Cornish in them, they are a CornishX. Just like I have a smidgeon of Irish in me, so I can call myself Irish.
Your last sentence is very confusing, you tell us no hatchery calls them CornishX's then you say the name is already in use, which is it?
BTW I named my son Mike, and I think that name was already in use too.
That was my point with the original post here after Jessica's video. I was simply pointing out the obvious differences between her CX's and mine. Then I went a step further to ponder what other differences there might be.
I have no idea what strain the hatchery I got mine from uses. I am interested where others got theirs only in so much as I want to buy a slower growing CornishX. Mine are growing too fast now for my goals. Which I why I suggested I might use a couple different hatcheries next year. MY only fear being bringing in a disease. However, I am sure some bureaucrat will make sure I am getting disease free chicks, or he is going to Hawaii on a all expense paid vacation by the hatchery.......( a joke, relax)
The people who actually produce these birds have strain names - like Ross 708. Ross Poultry (which I believe is a subsidiary of Aviagen) produces those.
They sell them to places like Meyer and Cackle, who sell them as Cornish X, probably because they buy multiple strains.
As to the naming, again, something doesn't have "an iota of cornish in [it]", as that's meaningless - it has certain alleles it has inherited from its parents - and Cornish Cross have specific combinations of these alleles. Cornish Cross are not a breed - they're a specific combination - they're not stable. They haven't been line isolated, and it may be impossible to do so because some of the traits need to be heterozygous.
You're adding confusion and misleading people for no reason other than adding confusion and misleading people. I'm trying to fix a flock (of non cornish) birds right now because somebody did exactly what you're doing - they bred them with something else, but didn't change the name - so I've got all sorts of weird traits popping up that I'm trying to fix.
I have heard that Schlecht Hatchery has Big Jumbo CX's and they have a sterling reputation.
http://schlechthatchery.com/
Leave Ralph alone . And I am sure if she had a problem she would have asked himThis argument wasn't in this thread until DuluthRalphie dragged it in here from the other thread. If you have a problem with it being here, take it up with him.
Ralph, I have gotten both of my batches from the same hatchery and have had two or three in each batch with some black or gray feathers. I haven't seen anyone else's CX pics have black feathers.
I have wanted to give my CX a bath when I did the last batch but my current batch is just so clean. Glad to know it is a possibility.
Thanks for that blocking info Linda. Good to know should I need to use it.