You're going to hate me for this Mr. Bullfrog. I apologize and accept your retribution.
In my opinion, the Cracker line cannot be improved upon. It is what it is through centuries effort by two master breeders, Mother Nature and Darwinian Selection. If their history is what you say it is, then it is a significant cultural treasure that should be protected from introgression, both intentional and accidental, at all costs.
So there it is. That's been bottled up inside me for two years.
Agreed, but here’s why I’m doing it:
I can’t confirm the origins of my current flock I got 4 years ago, which is something I’ve been upfront about in this thread. Back then I didn’t know how to talk about gamefowl with strangers and I accidentally scared off the old farm couple who had them. Early on I let them know my profession, and I think they became concerned that my questions about whether these birds where junglefowl or gamefowl sent them the wrong vibes. They would never tell me where they got them from or how long they had them after repeated contacts. The same is true of my great uncle, who was a cocker and would have known everything there was to know about the family birds. Because he was a cocker until the day he died last year, he wouldn’t talk to me. He was concerned if he said the wrong thing I would turn him in. Which has some precedence I suppose because his brother-in-law, my grandfather who raised me, busted him for poaching gopher tortoises where my grandfather was a game and fish law enforcement officer. When the great uncle died other family members more contemporaneous to his generation opened up some and told me a lot about how the birds were raised. As a child I was basically country walking the birds for my great uncle and didn’t know it. I was lead to believe the “game chickens” weren’t fighters, but in fact they were.
So I’m not sure if my current flock is of old Florida stock, hatchery junglefowl, a lost line of Frank Gary American game bantams, or highly inbred or mini line Blueface or McLean hatch American games that have RJF traits coming out through a genetic quirk. Nor do I know whether the old Florida birds were Spanish game mixes, junglefowl mixes, American game mixes, or all of the above. All I know is that RJF-looking gamefowl were common on Florida homesteads for a couple hundred years at least and they lived feral. Everything else is my speculation.
By recollection, my grandfather, and an elderly retired judge who has seen my flock, both agreed what I have is identical to what they grew up with and that the Cracker homestead gamefowl were only half the size of a traditional coop layer. Yet my own flock in childhood seemed larger in body to be more like small-sized American games, only slightly smaller than my layers. But I cannot account for how a child’s memory makes things seem larger that they were. Recently I saw some old family property and the shed and boat ramp on a lake that I remember to have been large clearly is not.
I don’t think a flock of red gamefowl on a Florida homestead 100 years ago could be improved on. But is that what I have? Or are my birds just an approximation? I don’t know.
Therefore, I’m ok with brining in American games that are also pretty close to the Cracker birds in look and identical in behavior and mixing them in to my flock. The Americans I am using grow up wild on a series of wood lots and are only brought in to tie cords and pens after adolescence. 4 years ago had I seen a flock of these Americans doing their thing in the woods, I would have said “yes l, that’s them!” Except for their size, which is quite large.
At the end of the day, a Cracker gamefowl should be a useful and practical bird. If it has lost some of its usefulness due to many years of inbreeding, it should have its blood refreshed. I feel the same about bulldogs. Bulldogs should be functional. If decades of pure breeding makes them something different than what they once were, then they should be outcrossed to restore functionality.
My little Crackers are just too small to be very useful as homestead fowl.