- Jun 20, 2014
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These are my 2 little girls
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I love these little chickens so much! I'm hoping to find a trio/hatching eggs to purchase or at least a breeder I can learn more about this breed from because I think they're just fantastic.![]()
Anderson Gardens in Calif claims to have been in the chicken business for 20 years and claim they sell Olandsk among many other breeds - you might question them to get answers directly from a breeder:
http://www.andersongardenchickens.com/chickens-chicks-and-fertile-eggs.html
In my experience contacting breeders on their websites is about a 25% reply rate. Some breeders have iffy web functions and never receive their web emails and yet others with good websites will reply back instantly. I've had bad experiences with sending emails supplied on websites so I will call as a last resort if a phone number is listed. GL!
Thank you so much! I've noticed that recently trying to contact a bantam Phoenix breeder. I'm trying to figure out the line between a determined inquiry & obnoxious in my attempts at making contact.![]()
Yeah, I used to wonder if I was being obnoxious too -- until I discovered many breeders have changed web hosts or changed email addresses or changed phone contacts. I was looking for a coop manufacturer whose web host had changed to forward the old website to a new web page and it stopped functioning. It was lucky that the phone number was still viable for me to get a direct contact to the manufacturer. Be persistent. Serious breeders in business definitely want to sell their stock. It's even better if you get a good breeder recommendation from someone.
In my limited experience because I want healthy as well as pretty breeds I avoid backyard breeders and have started to look for breeders with poultry club participation as officers, State certifications like NPIP, etc, and who offer vaccination options. Many will say this is not a guarantee that you will get good or healthy stock but the chances are still safer than a backyard breeder IMO. I will pay 2 to 3x more for a juvenile bird through a certified, vaccinating breeder or hatchery because I don't deal with cheaper hatching eggs or chicks. I get only juveniles from 2 to 4 months old -- as juveniles they handle the USPS shipping better than chicks or eggs. The only time I got chicks was from my local feed store where I know which reputable commercial hatchery he orders from.
Many feed stores have customers put their home-bred chicks on consignment for sale and I won't buy birds from unknown origins or unknown health background. I'm not being snobby. I just want to be as responsible as I can be to have my limited zoned 5 hens as healthy and pretty as possible. When you can only have a limited flock you get more selective about what breeds to have and which combative breeds not to mix with gentle breeds and/or not to mix bantams with LF.
Thank you very much for this info. I'm actually looking into breeding a small number of specific bantam breeds (Dwarf Olandsk is one of them) & knowing what people look for in a breeder, as well as the breed, is definitely good for me to know. I greatly appreciate you sharing your perspective here!