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No, that's not bad--it's not that smeared, but the black bars could be just little heavier, IMO, for breeding. And no, you don't want solid black in the tail, either. What you want is crisp black, dominant over the white, no smearing. The thing is, a rooster with too much black will throw some sons with too little black. A rooster with too little black will be much more likely throw birds with too little black (depending, of course, on what you're breeding him with). But, black, generally speaking, tends to fade in Delawares as you go down generations. I've got sons out of George with very light barring. Hmm, maybe some pictures are in order. Hang on...
Edited for clarity.
No, that's not bad--it's not that smeared, but the black bars could be just little heavier, IMO, for breeding. And no, you don't want solid black in the tail, either. What you want is crisp black, dominant over the white, no smearing. The thing is, a rooster with too much black will throw some sons with too little black. A rooster with too little black will be much more likely throw birds with too little black (depending, of course, on what you're breeding him with). But, black, generally speaking, tends to fade in Delawares as you go down generations. I've got sons out of George with very light barring. Hmm, maybe some pictures are in order. Hang on...
Edited for clarity.
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