Old and Rare Breeds

Thanks Jon.....
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Thank you for some insight into the breed. It is so hard to find information on some of the rarer breeds sometimes. I really love the crests on them. Are they a cold climate breed? It seems like the breeders live in cooler climates. Would they do well somewhere hot and very humid? Where do they originate from?

ETA: Ok I just read the article and see that they may have come from Belgium.
 
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I really enjoy this type of information. Rusty's story is one you'll not find in a book anywhere: you have to get it directly from the source.
 
The Pyncheon.... I believe that Mille Fleur colored bantams from Western and Northern Europe...where several other breeds very similar reside were probably brought to America.....here they were raised on the eastern coast by a few farmers who recognized the breed's hardiness and beautiful color and decided to keep a few.... smaller birds eat less and can be kept in a smaller environment..... When the larger, meatier and better laying breeds came along...I do believe that chickens like the Pyncheons were pushed aside and kept by very few....ie: Nathaniel Hawthorne...etc.....there was a "Pyncheon Craze" at the beginning of the 1900's.....by the early 50's the breed was almost gone.... They are coming back...slowly but surely!!!!!
 
This thread has alot of information that I've been looking for. I started with a mixed hatchery flock, then last year bought BCM chicks from a breeder. I think what I've learned from these birds, is that I want to raise non-hatchery old hardy breeds that lay well, and are cold/heat tolerant. I think I've narrowed it down to Javas, Sussex, or Delawares. I would like to choose just one breed. Any input from people that own either of these breeds? Or where to buy eggs from a good breeder that I could incubate?
 
All of these breeds need help...I used to have Speckled Sussex from a reputable breeder.....beautiful chickens....hardy and great layers of light brown eggs. They did great up here in Northern Michigan....(4 degrees here this morning) They do need more breeders....
 
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Do you know if its true that the people in Nathaniel Hawthorne's book House of Seven Gables were based on the activities of his Pyncheons?
 
That's what I heard.....(???) I also heard he (Hawthorne) would observe his bantams from the windows for hours....admiring how they carried on with their daily "chicken" routines. I'm just happy that I have some of history out in my coops....
 
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