Quote:
Old english game legs come it lots of color.......white,yellow,green,even black
This is true for Europe, but in the US they are only allowed to have white. Any other leg color is due to an outcross, except dark varieties (blacks, brown reds, blues) or varieties like Gingers, Red quils (some classify them as a dark variety), silver/golden laced (outcross, Campine as well) which have slate. If you have any other leg color and the bird resembles a Old english it is probably a American game in the US.
-Daniel.
My B.B Reds for some reason had a yellowish like color when hatched, but they are all white now that they aged. And I would think her chicks would be B.B Reds or Silver Duckwings (not to good at determining color at such a young age, but those two seem to be the most common) My other darker varieties as DTChickens says had the slate legs. Not sure on my birds qualities however.
Old english game legs come it lots of color.......white,yellow,green,even black
This is true for Europe, but in the US they are only allowed to have white. Any other leg color is due to an outcross, except dark varieties (blacks, brown reds, blues) or varieties like Gingers, Red quils (some classify them as a dark variety), silver/golden laced (outcross, Campine as well) which have slate. If you have any other leg color and the bird resembles a Old english it is probably a American game in the US.
-Daniel.
My B.B Reds for some reason had a yellowish like color when hatched, but they are all white now that they aged. And I would think her chicks would be B.B Reds or Silver Duckwings (not to good at determining color at such a young age, but those two seem to be the most common) My other darker varieties as DTChickens says had the slate legs. Not sure on my birds qualities however.