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You and Jeff both make some very good points. The definition of "breeding true" is offspring that are extremely similar to the parents. In that regard, hybrids don't breed true, at least not all of them. But you will get a percentage that are like the parents, or close enough for the dinner table, anyway. Which is what most of us home breeders are concerned about. Unlike big corporations such as Tyson, who are concerned with more with uniformity.
Raising meat for your own table, you don't need to have identical birds. The occasional throw-back to the rocks is no big deal, they'll be kind of scrawny compared to the others, but still perfectly good food. So piffel! on uniformity!
Once upon a time, when I was brand-new to keeping chickens, I bought some Cornish-X hens from a guy, having no idea what they were, or anything about them. The man told me they were the big Cornish crosses from MMH, and they were already enormous, and they were already laying eggs. He had them just mixed in with the rest of his mixed-breed flock, and didn't seem to do anything special with them. So I bought some, I don't remember how many. Maybe as many as 6 maybe only 4. (It was over 15 years ago) Anyway, not having any idea there was anything unusual about these birds, other than being huge, I just put them with my others, and they free-ranged along with the others, They laid really nice, big, brown eggs. A large percentage were gigantic double yolked eggs. I didn't hatch any, so I don't know how they would have turned out. I had these hens for a few months, I had intended to hatch some of the eggs in the spring, to see if the daughters would also lay double yolks. But before spring arrived, they began to drop dead from CHF. By the time I figurd out what was wrong, I only had one left, and she was showing symptoms, purple comb when resting on her keel, wheezing...so we butchered her, she dressed out to about 15 lbs, or so, like a small turkey. The breast was still tender, I made strips and fried it, and the thighs, too. The rest was tough, (I fried a little to see, it was like truck tire!) and was made into nice chicken and dumplings. Stewed a long time, it got tender.
So, yes, you can keep them long enough to breed, but not if you feed them like broilers. I might try it again sometime, and see what I get when they breed. I don't know if the roos will be able to mount a hen, or if they'll be too ungainly. If the roos can't breed, you could let a standard Cornish breed the hens, and see what you get. I wouldn't try breeding them back to a Rock roo, because I had some white Plymouth Rocks from MMH, several years ago, along with some CX's. The Rocks were really scrawny, but they were from MMH, and I've had other so-called pure-breds from them that were not very good quality birds. It may be that Rocks from another source may be a lot better than the ones I had.
You and Jeff both make some very good points. The definition of "breeding true" is offspring that are extremely similar to the parents. In that regard, hybrids don't breed true, at least not all of them. But you will get a percentage that are like the parents, or close enough for the dinner table, anyway. Which is what most of us home breeders are concerned about. Unlike big corporations such as Tyson, who are concerned with more with uniformity.
Raising meat for your own table, you don't need to have identical birds. The occasional throw-back to the rocks is no big deal, they'll be kind of scrawny compared to the others, but still perfectly good food. So piffel! on uniformity!
Once upon a time, when I was brand-new to keeping chickens, I bought some Cornish-X hens from a guy, having no idea what they were, or anything about them. The man told me they were the big Cornish crosses from MMH, and they were already enormous, and they were already laying eggs. He had them just mixed in with the rest of his mixed-breed flock, and didn't seem to do anything special with them. So I bought some, I don't remember how many. Maybe as many as 6 maybe only 4. (It was over 15 years ago) Anyway, not having any idea there was anything unusual about these birds, other than being huge, I just put them with my others, and they free-ranged along with the others, They laid really nice, big, brown eggs. A large percentage were gigantic double yolked eggs. I didn't hatch any, so I don't know how they would have turned out. I had these hens for a few months, I had intended to hatch some of the eggs in the spring, to see if the daughters would also lay double yolks. But before spring arrived, they began to drop dead from CHF. By the time I figurd out what was wrong, I only had one left, and she was showing symptoms, purple comb when resting on her keel, wheezing...so we butchered her, she dressed out to about 15 lbs, or so, like a small turkey. The breast was still tender, I made strips and fried it, and the thighs, too. The rest was tough, (I fried a little to see, it was like truck tire!) and was made into nice chicken and dumplings. Stewed a long time, it got tender.
So, yes, you can keep them long enough to breed, but not if you feed them like broilers. I might try it again sometime, and see what I get when they breed. I don't know if the roos will be able to mount a hen, or if they'll be too ungainly. If the roos can't breed, you could let a standard Cornish breed the hens, and see what you get. I wouldn't try breeding them back to a Rock roo, because I had some white Plymouth Rocks from MMH, several years ago, along with some CX's. The Rocks were really scrawny, but they were from MMH, and I've had other so-called pure-breds from them that were not very good quality birds. It may be that Rocks from another source may be a lot better than the ones I had.
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