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In the Araucana world we don't call them EE. It is too confusing. We figure, if it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, its a duck no matter what color it is. Now straight combs do pop up every once in a while in the araucana. Also some seem to think that if a bird has a straight comb it can't possibly be carring the blue egg gene. I think we might do well to remember, at least for those who were aware, that the original blue egg laying birds that went into making the araucana were straight combed, as was 95% of all the blue egg layers in South America at the time the araucana was being created so to speak. One science paper with very little documented breeding exercises behind it does not a fact make.
The Standard of Perfection is a basis for breeding and showing, in the araucana breed 75% to 95% of all hatched araucana do not match the standard of perfection, whether in color, having a tail, or lacking tufts. It does not make them any other breed, nor does it make them a mutt. They are by their very nature a breed that does not breed true. They are Araucana. The Araucana was an Araucana before there was a standard. In fact one of the colors that was fairly prevelant in the araucana when it was created, was a red pyle type color. That fact is well documented. The red pyle is not an accepted color in the araucana today.
I breed, raise, and show the rumpless tufted araucana. I have over 200 of them running around my farm. Most do not meet the SOP. I own a copy of the SOP, even the newest one, your bird appears to me to be a project lavender araucana.
Enjoy him he is beautiful.
Lanae