I don't show but I would prefer a judge that knows and judges to the standard. Without that, most breeds would become homogenous and shaped the same.
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I don't show but I would prefer a judge that knows and judges to the standard. Without that, most breeds would become homogenous and shaped the same.
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I asked that same question, LOL! Got a lot of bluster in response.
The judge was Amanda Clark. There's no Amanda Clark listed in the latest APA directory. I'm assuming she is now Amanda Stallman. I thought she was an excellent judge. One of the Java entries in that show had placed very well at a local show a few weeks earlier. (Not my bird.) She did not rank it as highly as some of us expected. We were surprised, so we asked her about it later. She went over the birds with us in detail. She was paying more attention to depth of chest and keel length than we were, and she had a point. It was good to get that additional perspective.
I asked her point blank why she didn't disqualify my birds, because they didn't have yellow soles. She said you can't always tell so she gave them the benefit of the doubt. Turned out she made the right call. When I eventually culled those birds their soles and skin had a definite pale yellow tinge after they were bled out. I could have sworn they were white. Lesson learned.
Amanda is a fairly new judge but she is very good. I have known her since she was 12.I asked that same question, LOL! Got a lot of bluster in response.
The judge was Amanda Clark. There's no Amanda Clark listed in the latest APA directory. I'm assuming she is now Amanda Stallman. I thought she was an excellent judge. One of the Java entries in that show had placed very well at a local show a few weeks earlier. (Not my bird.) She did not rank it as highly as some of us expected. We were surprised, so we asked her about it later. She went over the birds with us in detail. She was paying more attention to depth of chest and keel length than we were, and she had a point. It was good to get that additional perspective.
I asked her point blank why she didn't disqualify my birds, because they didn't have yellow soles. She said you can't always tell so she gave them the benefit of the doubt. Turned out she made the right call. When I eventually culled those birds their soles and skin had a definite pale yellow tinge after they were bled out. I could have sworn they were white. Lesson learned.
Columbian is challenging if one is working with an eb ( Brown) based variety. It is not if one is working with an eWh based variety ( Delaware, Light Sussex, Columbian Marans { these are the only 3 breeds I know of that are eWh based Columbians}) because eWh does not require color balancing of the underfluff. Tho the Delaware has the addition challenge of the barring gene.No matter what we are breeding and/or showing, there is a unique set of challenges. Some here are working with Delaware, and there are unique color challenges with them. A couple are trying Columbian colored birds. That is a difficult and challenging color. It has long been understood that it was. The breeds represented here are not in the best shape, not in this variety. I could go on forever about the unique hang ups my breed and color variety has. There is a reason there are not any consistently good colored birds in black tailed buff. Buff is a struggle all of it's own.
I guess that is the fun in it. This seams to require some want to, and the ability and desire to solve problems. They are there to be solved. It certainly requires patience. It takes a time to sort through the things we talk about.
It is good to hear the discussion of the people actually breeding for improvement, these rare breeds.
I asked Bob Blosl one time how I could breed closer feathers on my Light Sussex. He replied that I should breed for 25 more eggs a year from my hens. When I did that, the closer feathering would follow on the coattails of increasing the egg productivity.Ugh, cushions. I wish there were more antique photographs of Javas to see just how many had cushions. It would help to get an idea of whether we're fighting just the last century of breeding, or if this is something they have been fighting all along - like the red and gold feathers that pop out.
All of ours tend to have looser feathering no matter which bloodline they come from. There are worse things than loose feathering. These darn squiggly combs in the McGraws make me nuts. And the McGraw birds are flightier than the Urch birds and make me want to scream. The other day all 8 hens and the cock in one pen crammed themselves into the nestbox to hide while I refilled their feed. eye roll
Columbian is challenging if one is working with an eb ( Brown) based variety. It is not if one is working with an eWh based variety ( Delaware, Light Sussex, Columbian Marans { these are the only 3 breeds I know of that are eWh based Columbians}) because eWh does not require color balancing of the underfluff. Tho the Delaware has the addition challenge of the barring gene.
Best,
Karen
I'm finding Delaware pretty challenging, color wise. I've got enough going on with the color that I'm not too focused on fluff yet. But concern about messing up the fluff does make a handy excuse when people tell me to cross in some other breed of Columbian color to help.![]()
Columbian is challenging if one is working with an eb ( Brown) based variety. It is not if one is working with an eWh based variety ( Delaware, Light Sussex, Columbian Marans { these are the only 3 breeds I know of that are eWh based Columbians}) because eWh does not require color balancing of the underfluff. Tho the Delaware has the addition challenge of the barring gene.
Best,
Karen