New, heritage chickens?

Before the APA the successful farmers did not let their birds randomly mate. You don't have to belong to any Club to understand that breeding of any farm animal should not be willy nilly. It can be and many do but that is wasting money.

Walt


So if I bought a heritage rooster and hen and decided to hatch the eggs, I'd still be continuing the heritage breed. They just might not be considered "show" heritage chickens?

Im a slow learner...:p
 
You'd be breeding one bird to another of a specific breed and that would be breeding, that's for sure. You still won't have a true heritage strain of that breed, though you will have a bird that is considered as stemming from a breed that was started long ago and is now called a heritage breed.

Now, if you bred those two and picked out the offspring that most resembles what the original breed looked and performed like, and then bred those birds and kept the offspring most like the standard, and kept doing that over and over down through the years until you had returned your original strain back into something that looked and performed like the original breed standard, you would then have a heritage quality bird.

If you just bred two RIR birds together and did nothing to try and sway those pairings to improve and move towards the original standard, then you'd just have a flock that may or may not resemble the original two birds. They would be red, they would lay eggs and would taste like chicken. Depends on if you have any pride or integrity towards the true heritage of the breed what you would call your birds at that point.

They still wouldn't resemble the original breed called RIR unless you had obtained those two birds from someone who was breeding towards that standard, had achieved some measure of success in that endeavor, and you too had continued their work towards that goal.

Some folks either don't know or don't care and they advertise their chicks as coming from a heritage breed flock, but when I ask about the source and they tell me they are just hatchery birds they bred together and are selling the chicks, then I give it a pass...this is someone who knows nothing about chickens and probably isn't developing his flock for the best genetics in the first place. He's calling them "heritage" as a selling point only...if not he'd just advertise RIR chicks and wouldn't put the word "heritage" in there at all.
 
So if I bought a heritage rooster and hen and decided to hatch the eggs, I'd still be continuing the heritage breed. They just might not be considered "show" heritage chickens?

Im a slow learner...
tongue.png

Most of the birds I raise are not show birds. I show a lot, but very few are show birds. I do keep the production up and as an example my New Hamps start laying at 4.5 to 5 months and they don't stop laying until they molt or they are out of here. I have the males at 9 lbs at 7 months.

I am not sure what it says on the APA site regarding laying capacity of show birds, but that will be removed if in fact it is still there.

In addition to putting in the economic qualities of the APA breeds, it will also contain judging instructions for the determination of the economic qualities for the judges.

The APA will also return to flock certification for those economic qualities and is also forming alliances with Farm Forward, The Heritage Poultry Conservancy and the Livestock Conservancy Collaboration.

The new APA management is returning to the basics. There will always be ornamental breeds that have no economic value and maybe that is where the low egg laying expectations came from. The APA is very concerned about doing what we can to insure birds are bred to do the job they were intended to do.

Walt
 
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