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Nice story, I like that.I participated in an egg swap and Jim Heinz included one Iowa Blue egg in the batch of eggs he sent to me. That one egg hatched and it was a cockerel. My plan was to just put the bird into the freezer when he grew out, what was I going to do with one male non-APA bird. I would have to use up a whole run/coop!
My husband lets the birds out of their coops in the morning. This one cockerel was living in with my silver campines that were too young to breed yet anyway. When I told him my plan to butcher this one bird, he said I couldn't do it, it was his favorite bird. Each morning when he opened the pop door, he was the first bird out. He would fly from the door to the roost in the pen, stand up tall and crow to the morning.
That is what sent me on my quest to find pullets (and of course lots of additional cockerels). The pen of IBs is now one of my favorites as well (not to mention two pens of youngsters growing out)!
So I guess for me, it was the bearing of the breed.
As I read through this, I admit I'm hard pressed to pick out where the standard as written (which we all agreed on at the time that we were trying to describe what we thought was original Iowa Blue type) varies so much from the original that it somehow is describing another breed or redefining the breed. To me, it shows enough latitude to encompass everything from traditional to more modern and anywhere in between, allowing the breeder to take the avenue they prefer.
As far as I can tell, the short summary of the last several pages is keep the standard as written, changing just the name Birchen to Gray as it is more representative and likely pushes us more towards the orginal breed type of heavier lacing than what we were previously seeing the majority of in the birds available. We agreed that Silver Penciled isn't exact, but it's as close as anything to the light gray Iowa Blue, certainly they are as close to penciled as they are to mealy gray, which has no penciling, just uniform mealy pattern. From what I can tell the original light gray IB looked intermediate between the two types, more or less, so it's a coin flip which you go with and the standard as written for SP alters the SP traditional standard to reflect that intermediate appearance. I think the original birds were prettier than mealy gray, showing some mildly disorganized penciled pattern. As for the other chick colors and their adult appearance, this is an area that bears exploration as there are too few numbers to make any determinations, yet.
Have you changed your mind from what we discussed when comprising the standard and decided we missed something?
I personally don't envision the club to only represent the show bird...or only represent the (what is perceived to be) original bird. What I would hope for in the club is for each member who wants to contribute to work hard on the area they are most interested in with all the passion they have for the breed. If your passion is showing, then by all means, promote and dedicate time in that regard. If your passion is history, breed characteristics, origins of pattern/appearance, then put your best efforts into the public education in that regard. There is plenty of room at the table for more than one approach, one opinion, one viewpoint.
As has been stated, standards aren't necessary to breed for what you want in a breed, nor is anyone required to breed towards a standard. It is meant as a guideline towards uniformity, as a compilation of what the standards committee envisioned as the perfect Iowa Blue with the knowledge we had, and to give an ideal to hold a bird up to when selecting to type. The standard is a necessary evil for APA acceptance (which has its benefits and its detriments), but that is only one facet of focus for the club. As for the varieities selected at this time for a written standard, they represent the types with the highest numbers and most popularly found, thus far. If other varieties come to popularity, they will be """officially""" represented as well.
I guess I just don't see where the standard suddenly became a redefinition of the breed. It was never written with that intent, we were all there and were trying our darndest to describe the original bird, writing a standard with enough leeway to get us from here to that goal. I can see where concern may be raised that the breed's appearance may change over time based on the breeders who will be selecting the next generations, but that happens with any living thing where selection pressure is applied, in the wild or captivity. No animal or species is ever static, it's always in flux. Unless you control all birds everywhere, they will trend towards the wishes of those that have them and divergence (lines) will occur. It's the ultimate democracy. The birds that garner the most favor from future generations will increase in numbers and that is what will pass into the future generations. The best that we (each of us) as breeders can hope for is that we work to our internal definition of perfection, educate and inform to generate interest, and expand the population. At least in the meantime we have our own darn nice flocks. The important features of the breed will vary based on each breeder's opinion, but the beauty is that we are all able to work on the aspects we desire and the combined effort works to keep the breed from being lost for good.
Will some lines lose certain characteristics and gain others? Undoubtedly, has been that way, will be that way. That's evolution and life. The club stands as a central meeting place for everyone to discuss ideas, find other breeders with similar standards, communicate, educate, promote.