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P.s. Going up to pick up a Dickey incubator (woot!). Plan to set all IB eggs I can this year, get some numbers to cull hard from.
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Connie- I totally agree with your opinion regarding the standard.My opinion on penciled vs. barred for "THE" standard - Given that in the accounts barring was not described, but repeated mention of fine pencilings as well as the appearance of what photographs we have, I believe the penciled variety should be what we go for. I don't think fully barred is desirable, but a soft gray thinly-penciled appearance to the hens, breaking up into stippling is what I would like to breed towards. I would not disqualify barring appearing, but it should not be the predominant pattern (like campines), the penciled breast should be universally present.
Obviously we should eliminate autosomal red and gold, but I think there is room to play on the pattern with selection and refinement in breeding lines. I also agree that we need to build the barn first. These birds need more size and vigor, I would cull for small/thin/unthrifty over poor color.
Snowpetal- If she does develop some gold, I would encourage you to breed her to a Silver Penciled Rock rooster. Select for silver penciled birds that are marked according to the standard that is being written up and select for willow legs as as dark of eyes as possible. You could then take these F1 babies and breed them to some Silver Iowa Blues when you are able to obtain some. This would give you a nice "base" flock to work with that is devoid of gold leakage/autosomal red.
Just a thought.
Kari has a few of these F1 crosses, as do I from eggs I got from her. from what I'm seeing in my birds as well as Kari's, I'm thinking these F1 birds will make great assets to our breeding programs. Don't be afraid to add some outside blood to improve the birds. The main thing to remember is to select the offspring that resemble the standard the closest. And then to continue breeding for that standard.
Kari may have more to say on this subject as she has more experience on this........
Mine have stayed nice and silver. I did cull a few birds for leakage and it was obvious by the time they were 3 mos old. My breeding pen of them is under shade, but I do have a couple of cockerels in my cull pen. That pen gets a lot of sun and I haven't seen any sign of sunburn/brassiness in them. The breeding group in someone else's flock that I saw were in full shade and they were all brassy.Deb, do your SPPRs yellow in the sun or will only S/s+ do that? I haven't had mine long enough to know, but they look pure for silver now. Usually with the Iowa Blues it obvious right away if they are split for gold. That's awesome you live in an area that has specialty shows!