Passion is how I wound up with Black Javas. Saw a good trio at a show and fell in love. Had never heard of the breed before that. Now we'll see if I can actually do something with them. Never had anything but hatchery mutts before. This breeding thing is a challenge that's going to keep me busy for a long time. With chickens you can eat your mistakes, so it's all good.
Sarah
I am where you are Sarah. I am new in this, but like the birds.
I have liked the birds since I had a box of chicks as a kid. One of those feed store specials. Where you got the free dozen chicks (black sex link cockerels, by the way LOL), for purchasing a bag of feed. I cut some serious grass to maintain my little flock. I went back and added this and that.
I think that I killed a couple along the way figuring it out. Guess they were sacrificial lambs.
Still today, I look forward to the box of chicks in the spring. I do not think that will ever change.
I think starting is like learning to garden. A gardener has failures and set backs, but likes doing it enough to keep doing it. And for all the year's failures is still looking through the seed catalogs over the winter.
After a couple years, you learn your seasons and your specific conditions. You get better and know what to expect. When to plant this to avoid that. But then you move, and though you have experience, you learn your new circumstances. What worked there doesn't work here.
A gardener keeps on gardening and a breeder keeps on breeding. A master gardener and a master breeder is the ones that enjoyed it enough to stick it out over a life time and get pretty darn good at it.