Quote:
I agree, he's purty!
I agree, he's purty!
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Well...GFF actually brought this breed into this country legally. All of the cost and risk and paperwork. I don't know about everyone else on this site but I am glad they did. I really like my girls and I never would have imported them myself. If you had looked a little closer at their site they didn't just change the price on this breed. They changed the price on most of their breeds. My guess would be that they are trying to have more orders go through their regular website instead of selling the birds at auction. Or they could have another reason to make a lot of their breeds $29. I believe they only have the Jill Reese line of Legbars left at their farm and they are also $29 a chick this year. It seemed like that line of birds was well received.I, too, noticed the dramatic drop in price of GFF's Isbar chicks. I think they have some funky genetics in their new line that they may not have known about and it is biting them in the you-know-where.
I, too, noticed the dramatic drop in price of GFF's Isbar chicks. I think they have some funky genetics in their new line that they may not have known about and it is biting them in the you-know-where.
Well...GFF actually brought this breed into this country legally. All of the cost and risk and paperwork. I don't know about everyone else on this site but I am glad they did. I really like my girls and I never would have imported them myself. If you had looked a little closer at their site they didn't just change the price on this breed. They changed the price on most of their breeds. My guess would be that they are trying to have more orders go through their regular website instead of selling the birds at auction. Or they could have another reason to make a lot of their breeds $29. I believe they only have the Jill Reese line of Legbars left at their farm and they are also $29 a chick this year. It seemed like that line of birds was well received.
Personally I would be more inclined to report someone who smuggled in eggs than to buy birds from them. They could be bringing diseases into this country that we currently do not have.
Also yes one of my pullets has a funny comb. Not a pea comb. A funny comb that does not match any comb I recognize. I will not breed her. When I chose this breed I knew that it had a very small population. I expected it to have some problems. Personally I liked that it has a new market of people who want to continue this breed and improve it. I would love to walk into a feed store one day and see them selling Isbars. Only breeds that are recognized and sell well show up at feed stores. (Granted they are usually poor examples of the breed. Though a feed store isn't where you should be buying birds if you want quality examples.) Right now almost no one ever knows what I am talking about when they ask what breeds I have.
Quote: Are you able to post photo's of that "funny comb"?
I am glad to see Isbars in this country also. Yes, it is expensive to import birds into this country (legally, anyway) and I wish to support them. I don't mind paying a price that supports legal imports, as long as the seller is very conscientious to ensure that the genetics are pure. Not perfect, mind you, but not mixed. My problem with GFF has been their reputation for sending chicks with questionable genetics in with their orders. The 2 cockerels I pictured were received with an order of Isbars - only Isbars. They were not marked that they were something different. If I didn't know what Isbars are supposed to look like, like many new to the breed at this point, I may have just added them to the breeding pen and sold eggs or chicks as pure Isbar and the damage would perpetuate. This is no help in trying to preserve the breed.
I have been working to bring diversity to my breeding groups, too. My chicks last year were very hardy. So hardy, in fact, that I ended up with more than I planned. I set many eggs expecting a so-so hatch and subsequent survival rate, but instead had excellent hatches and no losses as they got older. I was very blessed in that way. I think those breeders that stuck with this breed have found them to actually be very tough once they acclimated to this country.
The majority of my new line Isbars look very similar to my original line and I look forward to working with them, even the cockerel with the small comb (the pullet has been sold). These are a very thrifty breed that are awesome layers of beautiful eggs. I think one day you will see them a common offering. But we really don't need the mess that the Ameraucana breeders have with EE and Americanas being mistaken for purebred birds. Only with diligence can we ensure this doesn't happen to the Isbar.
Here are the pullet and the cockerel that I received with "funny combs". Notice the lack of wattles on the them. The third picture is a cockerel of about the same age for comparison.
![]()
![]()