This thread was edited. Please be sure to voice your opinion in a respectful manner.
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This is a great topic, but boy is it in the wrong place.
It seems to me that I was criticized a few months ago for doing just what is now advocated here. I critiqued some Sebastopols that were poor representatives of the breed which had no place in a breeding program, would have been laughed out of a show hall and did not measure up to the Standard. I meant no hard feeling to their loving owners, but they were what they were. Which is it? Are only quality birds supposed to be bred from, or does anything go just because someone has an emotional attachment to it? You can't have it both ways.
edited by staff
TOP QUALITY PARENTS DONT GUARANTEE TOP QUALITY OFF SPRING.
Be honest about judging abird you bought as a gosling, and just oohed and aaahed over.
It might be a perfect pet who is pretty, but [COLOR=FF0000]not[/COLOR] perfectly good for breeding.
If you want to breed you [COLOR=006400]invest[/COLOR] in breeding stock and the [COLOR=006400]price[/COLOR] that comes with it.
If you want pretty pets you buy newly hatched and take the gamble it may not grow into a breedable bird.
Yes, true. Some people aren't breeding for appearance, but for meat qualities or egg laying abilities. I don't see anything wrong with that. After all, ducks, geese, and chickens don't have the same place in our culture as, say, dogs, cats and horses. Many people consider their birds livestock. As long as they aren't trying to pass them off as something they are not to unsuspecting buyers, I don't see anything wrong with them breeding their top producing birds, even if they don't meet the SOP for their breed. I'm sure there are plenty of people out there who laugh at people who breed birds for no other reason than that they are "pretty."I think the real question is "What are you breeding for?" If you have a nice small flock of backyard birds with lovely temperaments and you want to breed them to keep your own flock going then by all means, do it. If you are breeding for show quality birds to show and improve the breed for public sale, then be picky, cull out the ones that are imperfect, make the brutal decisions.
I do not believe every bird needs to be show quality, but they all need to be the best for their purpose.
I suspect that what the OP was getting to is that it is not only unfair, it is dishonest, to breed poor quality birds and pass them off as quality purebreds. Not a nice thing to do, at all.