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the wild easterns will have an irredesence to them that a bronze will never get
The bronze has the irredesence to them that the eastern wild will never have. That's why it's called a bronze, the bronze was created by crossing some type of domestic turkey from Europe and the eastern wild turkey in the 18th century and was first named Point Judith Bronze in 1830 when a strain of this breed developed in Rhode Island. It was later simplified to the bronze turkey, and that's what we have today.
I have an eastern wild and she is really dull and drab but I see her new plumage is strikingly iridescent and beautiful shine so I’d be inclined to believe old plumage has lost its shine.I don't know what wild turkeys you've been looking at but the wild have an iridescence (shine) that no domestic turkey will ever achieve. In bright sunlight, the wild turkey colors just pop, like a bronze cast rainbow. The domestic bronze tend to be much darker with more muted coloration. It is thought that the domestic turkey is a descendant of a subspecies of the eastern turkey which lived in Mexico but no longer exists. The domestic bronze is basically a domesticated eastern wild turkey.