I tried to ruthlessly narrow down my list of candidates, omitting anything that looked beautiful but seemed of possibly questionable hardiness or temperament (banties, sumatras, leghorns) or breeds that while purty seemed unlikely to be good layers or provide a decent soup from culls (ornamentals like polish) or eat too much (jersey giants, etc). Also I didn't want feather-footed breeds for cleanliness reasons.
That left me with a short list of maybe a dozen, dozen and a half breeds to seriously consider. I picked three to try, figuring that I would keep whichever one(s) I wanted and then the next year audition a few more, you know?
The campines, although gorgeous and the one (sigh) hen is a real good layer, turned ot to be too whackadoodle for my nerves -- cockerels sold, kept the one hen, not gettin' more. The buff chanteclers are perfectly nice birds, and the one I et was exceedingly tasty as well, but it turns out that what I really fell in love wth was the speckled sussex. I got them because they (well anyhow their British relatives) are considered to provide some legitimate meat as well as eggs, and my m-i-l had light sussex as a kid but I couldn't source light sussex and settled for speckled instead
Turns out I like the speckled sussex so much I am mostly 'sticking with' them, to breed for utility qualities. Chanteclers need to find a new home. I am trying some EEs this spring, as something that might hopefully provide decent egg production for not too awful much feed, but I think I'll basically concentrate on the sussexes.
There are a lot of really different approaches to the problem, though, and this is only one and probably not the most typcial one around here either
Have fun deciding!
Pat
That left me with a short list of maybe a dozen, dozen and a half breeds to seriously consider. I picked three to try, figuring that I would keep whichever one(s) I wanted and then the next year audition a few more, you know?


Turns out I like the speckled sussex so much I am mostly 'sticking with' them, to breed for utility qualities. Chanteclers need to find a new home. I am trying some EEs this spring, as something that might hopefully provide decent egg production for not too awful much feed, but I think I'll basically concentrate on the sussexes.
There are a lot of really different approaches to the problem, though, and this is only one and probably not the most typcial one around here either

Have fun deciding!

Pat