I currently have 22 chickens, just sold 3, and plan on gathering 8 more chicks in AugustI got a whole big mixed flock (29 chickens and no more than 4 of the same breed), and i love all of the variety of egg and feather colors.


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I currently have 22 chickens, just sold 3, and plan on gathering 8 more chicks in AugustI got a whole big mixed flock (29 chickens and no more than 4 of the same breed), and i love all of the variety of egg and feather colors.
On the technical aspects I mostly agree with you. Breed SOP's were written so the judge knew what to look for when judging chickens in shows. I agree color/pattern doesn't make a breed, all the other stuff does, but approved color/pattern is part of the SOP. It can get a little muddled. I knew a lady working with a consortium to try to get a new color/pattern of Ameraucana approved. Once they introduced the color/pattern genetics their emphasis was to get back to the stuff that makes them Ameraucana, the color/pattern can be perfected later as long as they keep the correct genes in the mix. People saying that if an Ameraucana is not an approved color/pattern then it is not an Ameraucana but just an EE is what got me started thinking about what constitutes a breed in the first place.I would say yes they're still the same breed just not an approved variety.
I hear you.On the technical aspects I mostly agree with you. Breed SOP's were written so the judge knew what to look for when judging chickens in shows. I agree color/pattern doesn't make a breed, all the other stuff does, but approved color/pattern is part of the SOP. It can get a little muddled. I knew a lady working with a consortium to try to get a new color/pattern of Ameraucana approved. Once they introduced the color/pattern genetics their emphasis was to get back to the stuff that makes them Ameraucana, the color/pattern can be perfected later as long as they keep the correct genes in the mix. People saying that if an Ameraucana is not an approved color/pattern then it is not an Ameraucana but just an EE is what got me started thinking about what constitutes a breed in the first place.
Just because you can come up with a way to cross some color/patterns and eventually come up with an approved variety as far as showing doesn't mean you can for a lot of crosses. And they won't breed true, different colors/patterns will show up for a while. If you cross color/patterns they may technically be part of a breed but are they purebreeds since they don't breed true to color/pattern? Not in my opinion.
Where this came up was that one reason to keep a certain breed instead of a mixed flock was that sale value of hatching eggs or chicks can be better if you go purebreed. That value or even the ability to sell will diminish if you mix color/pattern of the same breed. I may have been able to word it more precisely to be technically correct but I think that point is still valid.
I agree it would be better if the person doing the breeding understood what constitutes a breed and selected their breeding chickens with that in mind but that takes a breeder to know what to look for. As long as they advertise them as hatchery quality and not show quality I don't have a problem with it even if they are not breeding to show standards, but yeah, that's not really conserving the breed.
This rather depends on what you call a 'significant change'. From domestic to feral in one or two generations with breeds that have supposedly had broodiness and tree roosting inclinations bred out of them and are supposedly completely dependent on human care I would call a significant change.
Oh, and btw, chickens are not and never have been birds.
Current science has them as descendants of ground dwelling dinosaurs with arms where they now have wings.