Hi Doc,
I got mine from Walt Boese in Deer Lodge , MT. Color is real nice. I wish I could
move the hackle a bit further up the neck on my males, tho. Nice wraparound on my male's hackles,
Tux's almost meets under his chin.
That's not an easy task!I've been working on the same issue with the American group...........IMHO the black hackle starts too far down on those. I find that waiting until the birds have gone through their second molt to choose better neck hackles works best for this particular group, as by then they are as big as they are going to get, and they can change a lot from pullet/cockerel to fully mature adults. I've had some great surprises and some ugly surprises waiting for those final adult feathers.
Eggs are smaller, hoping that will increase with son to mother cross.
Have a real nice outcross hen here that cost me in trade my foundation cock whose sire was a
3x APA Grand Champion. She's a show winner, but I worry about strain crossing. I have 2 nice sons
of my foundation cock here and will breed her to them. My foundation cock was very prepotent for
himself and stamped himself on his sons. Doncha know I will be doing staggered hatches and
zip tying the shanks to make sure the chicks don't get mislabeled.
I have a very elaborate colored zip-tie chart for my Lights - well, with all the breeds, actually. It's great to be able to see who is who right away. P.I.T.A. when somebody loses one, though!!!
It will be interesting to see the
differences in development as our other breedings will be son to dam; 3/4 bro ex 3/4 sis and full bro ex full sis.
Gonna be a lot of record keeping being done this Spring. that is why I am getting fairly frantic to figure out just
what to record and when.
Record Everything!!! Seriously..............everything and anything. I start with pen number, who is with who, age, lineage, number of eggs, supplements given. Then each chick is marked as soon as it hatches, genders of each hatch are recorded, and when the first cull comes I note any faults, problems, etc. with each chick from each parent. Helps me to identify the "breeding clunkers" quickly. I cull rigorously, starting really from the day of hatch (any obvious problems), then the second cull comes at 3 months, next cull at 5 months, next cull at 7 months, next cull at 9 months..........etc. etc. etc. Times not set in stone, if I identify one who needs removed at any time, I do so..........for example if a cockerel becomes mean at a young age, into the meat pen he goes. Pullets not laying in a decent time frame, into the meat pen. Out of hundreds of chicks hatched each year, maybe 12-18 make it into a breeding pen, then first hatch determines if they stay or if they go. Records are essential in keeping track of it all..................personally, kept in notebooks on real paper written in real ink. Computers are great, but, hard drives crash and files get corrupt; I can reach for a notebook off a shelf at any time, even if the electricity is down.![]()
Learned all my lessons the hard way................!!!!
Happy New Year, Doc!
Best Regards,
Karen
Here's to a great 2014 for all of us, and our birds!!!!!
Doc