Muffed Chinese Owl Question!

CascadiaRiver

Crowing
10 Years
Dec 12, 2014
1,773
356
261
Pacific Northwest
I was gifted two absolutely adorable muffed chinese owls from a pigeon mentor this previous weekend at a pigeon show. I got a dun hen and a black spread cock. The hen has more feathers on her feet than the cock but I'm not certain of the age nor if they just need to grow in from molting so I dont want to judge him too harshly yet.

Now heres where my question arises. To my understanding, Muffs on their feet mean a large "poof" of feathers on the feet like in a Russian Tumbler, right?

To my understanding, there are two genetics controlling the feathering of feet on pigeons, "Slipper" and "Grouse" and when combined that makes muffs. Is that correct?

Would anybody be able to help me out if I supplied some pictures of my new pair to determine is they have muffs, slippers, grouse, etc?
 
Thats where I found my inital information on the foot feathering, though I was curious because my pigeon mentor didnt seem to know much about foot feathering (and the different genes such as grouse and slipper and how combined they make muff) I feel like I could make an educated guess based on what I already know, though it'd be nice to know if someone else has/had them lol. There is little to no information on muffed chinese owls online though, theyre rare I think? Or just not bred or perhaps underdeveloped.
 
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Thats where I found my inital information on the foot feathering, though I was curious because my pigeon mentor didnt seem to know much about foot feathering (and the different genes such as grouse and slipper and how combined they make muff) I feel like I could make an educated guess based on what I already know, though it'd be nice to know if someone else has/had them lol. There is little to no information on muffed chinese owls online though, theyre rare I think? Or just not bred or perhaps underdeveloped.
What kind of feet are Chinese Owls supposed to have?

Is this of interest? oops! brb...
http://mentalfloss.com/article/7730...igeons-floofy-feet-are-actually-partial-wings this?
 
Chinese owls are supposed to have clean legs :) Or at least thats one standard, theres also muffed chinese owls though (if you know chickens its kinda like rosecomb leghorns and single comb leghorns) and I've seen the link before, the titles a bit farfetched but the information is fairly similar to that of the univserity of utah's information :)
 

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