Hi Jennifer,
Until you know the things below, it is very difficult to choose
a breeding plan. Let's take a stab at answering them:
What are the names of the classic strains in US Dorkings today?
(these would be the 3-5 "foundation strains" from which the other strains sprang)
How are they related to each other?
( Usually foundation strains spring from a fountainhead , be it an import; a single exceptional bird, or?)
What color are you breeding?
(Is it a rare color or an established one?).
In the tradition of the breed, can it be bred to another color, if so which one(s)?
( In a breed's history there are "acceptable" color crosses and others "just not done".)
Which strain(s) do you have and how are they related to each other?
( this is important so you can figure out Percentages of Inbreeding & Line Inheritance.)
Best,
Karen
well, I am not Jennifer, but this also applies to me, and I am not sure I know these answers. I would appreciate anyone knowledgeable about Dorkings correcting my knowledge deficits.
1. Classic strains-Urch, (contributed to McMurray strain,); TIce (became Troxel birds,); Horstman; Wetterstroem. I am very unsure of this.
2. Interrelated-as above
3. Color-Silver Grey, established and recognized in SOP, still rare.
4. Not aware of any acceptable color crosses.
5. I have Urch and McMurray birds.
eta: I am currently very concerned about poor hatchability. This season I have hatched about 20% of the eggs I placed in the incubator. Essentially all were fertile. The individual hatches have produced between 0 and 62.5% hatches, as I have tinkered with temp/humidity/ventilation. Hatches improved once I got the air cells to appropriate size and added daily cooling-off spells. I am currently looking at possible dietary changes and doing lots of test matings looking for pairs that nick, or individuals that throw non-vigorous offspring. After discussion on other threads and other forums, this is a Dorking-wide problem, not specific to a region, breeder, line or feed ration. Suggestions?
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