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Agreed on the size, definitely an area to improve. I will say with each generation that my birds have increased in size. Selection will move this up over time, along with good feeding and care.
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I'm glad to have just read this post Kari, right after I went back a couple of pages and read your previous one. Now I feel that I know where you stand on this.Connie, you and I are really on the same page with this and you have such a nice way of saying things![]()
I really feel like we went all out earlier this year and solidified a good standard to breed toward. I hate the thought of rewriting and starting all over again. I think changing the name from Birchen to Gray (Grey?) is a good idea because Birchen is such a well known color variety. Gray offers us the latitude to breed for more lacing as the SOP we designed calls for.
I don't think we need to outcross to clean up the lacing. Yes, my Iowa Blue Rock crosses have lovely penciling, but I'm seeing improvement in the pure Iowa Blues too. It may never be perfect, but our standard does not call for that![]()
What attracted you to the breed?
Good to take a minute and consider this.
I wanted to do what I could to see the traditional type preserved for generations after me to enjoy. I wanted my children to be able to enjoy them, and my children’s children to be able to experience their uniqueness and beauty.
I am now confident that I will be able to do that for my children and their children, but I am not confident that the Standards and they are proposed (and as the majority would like to see them proceed), will reflect the traditional beauty of this breed. I am concerned that the show birds of our future will share little the qualities that distinguished the traditional Iowa Blue. And these same show birds will be become the shining examples of the breed’s new identity.
As the breed club grows and evolves, hard decisions will need to be made and this decision (to restore or re-define) will probably be the most difficult to make, albeit, not the last challenge the club will face. When listening to the dialog, I hear a strong and dedicated desire to produce a bird that will exemplify characteristics that didn’t exist in the traditional bird and that is something I cannot conform my breeding pens or breeding philosophy to reflect.
A breed club has as its first priority to maintain the breed as represented in the Standard, but what happens when the Standard doesn’t represent the breed? As we’ve been raising birds in larger numbers it is becoming clearer that our Standard is not designed to restore the breed but to re-define what the breed will become. In keeping with my original desire to raise the Iowa Blue, I find that restoring and breeding a traditional bird will place my flock largely outside the designated and re-defined breed characteristics as put forth in the Standard. With this in mind, I believe it best to take a very passive role within the Iowa Blue Chicken Club and will divert my energy and support to breeding and restoring the traditional Iowa Blue.