Standards can be misinterpeted, especially when you're new to the breed and don't know how judges and people in the breed view the interpetation. I'd take a serious breeder's opinion, and I do, in regards my birds over a written word every day.
Breeders have lived with, bred and shown the birds and seen what actually happens when they reproduce. And nature never goes simply and directly to a goal.
Five people read a standard, look at pictures or sketches and see different things. Live with, work with and show a breed and things gel.
I've had people tell me a seriously faulted partridge rock is gorgeous, because they missed proper interpetation of the sections on color of hackles, or a feather feature. They read the standard - they missed the point.
I have birds from all three forms of sources for Dels, you can tell immediately which is which. Thanks to Janet and Cyn and owning all three, I can clearly tell the difference between hatchery and breeder and heritage quality birds. Including the obvious effort of years.
In person, in front of the judges, in reality, the SOP becomes real, what it actually means becomes apparent, and someone like Janet knows what the different faults already reproduce.
I would like to avoid mistakes and nature's whims that I can, by actually listening to someone who has been in the breed for years.
And I know better than to look at my hatchery birds and try to understand the standard through them - they're so far from the standard it's would be like trying to make apples into oranges. My hatchery birds are all under-sized. I still cannot point to the biggest of those and say - that is proper sized because it is the biggest that I have. It's not. It's just the closest I come. I cannot look at each tail faulted bird and decide that that one is correct, because it is the least faulted.
While that might be the only choice I had, and it's not wrong, I'd never presume to pass them off as other than they are, seriously faulted birds I need to work up from with the advice and help and input of breeders actually working the breed.
From people who have lived with the Standard, worked with it, bred for it. Who understand the inheritance of traits they SEE, good and bad. I can't see any sense in reading an SOP and telling a breeder of excellent birds, what it means when you've never shown in the breed.
<shaking head>
And my girls are another weekend closer to lay - yay.