- May 19, 2009
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If you had Sussex, you could do all this and also breed to the SOP.I agree, Fentress! At the bottom of the bottom of things, I'm pretty practical and I need a practical bird out back. I'm thinking my version of keeping to the middle of the road will be to breed the best layers that are also large and meaty birds and keep doing that until they are all large, meaty hens that lay like a champ, reproduce their own kind, are hardy to the max and can rustle their own grub for the better part of their meal. I'd breed them to the rooster that has a good size and sex on his brain at an early age, regardless of how high his tail may be and see if his offspring lay like they should.
Then, with a whole flock of hens that have the basics, one could then worry about feathering, points, type, etc. Forget the shows, forget the points and forget the SOP until they can produce what they were meant to produce and do it well...eggs and meat. That would be my primary goal. And they'd have to do it without lights up their butt for the winter, chemicals in their systems and without high protein feeds on hand at all times.
Of course, that could just be a pipe dream..but I find it the only one worth having to achieve what I would want in a heritage breed chicken.
Because in Sussex, production values *are* the SOP.

See Waltz's Ark in CO http://www.naturalark.com/ ;
Emily Robertson in Vancouver http://truenorthfarm.ca/ :
Walt Boese in MT ( Walt's Black Powder and Archery in Deer Lodge ) ,
Walt Reichert, Simpsonville, KY 40067 ,
Sunset Meadows Farms in OH http://sunsetmeadowfarm.com/chickens_and_eggs.html ,
Tony Albritton, ID https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/433985/feather-hills-farm-heritage-hatchery , just to name a few.
Best,
Karen
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