Opinions on my leghorn? Just curious/for fun

black_cat

♥♥Lover of Leghorns♥♥
May 21, 2020
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This is my white leghorn Tillie. It is very unlikely that she is a show quality bird, but I am just curious: If I was breeding white leghorns, what traits would I want to breed out and which would I want to reinforce and keep?
tillie.jpg

Any darkness on her feathers is either dirt or camera weirdness, not actual dark feathers. Her comb is now a bit larger, droopier, and redder.
 
If there are no thoughts on my leghorn, I am still wondering about showing and breeding birds in general (how do you go about picking a bird to show, how do you breed for certain traits, etc)
 
The old-timers trap-nested their Leghorn hens to select in favor of the hens with the best egg laying. You would need several Leghorn hens and a record-keeping system to do this.

Same goes for Minorcas and other Mediterranean breeds.

How is Tillie in the breakfast department? If she’s worth breeding, she should be laying almost daily.
 
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I don't know much buy I think tails should be at 40 degrees
With Leghorns, I wouldn’t go by appearance so much as egg-laying. There are other breeds where I would count tail angle as important, but not Leghorns. The whole point of Mediterranean breeds is their consistent egg-laying and that they DON’T go broody....

The old-timers kept a lot of Leghorn hens and selected them using trap-nesting.

Selecting for egg-laying is a bit difficult and expensive compared to selecting heavier dual-purpose breeds for size, early maturation, and the like which can be done at 8-16 weeks.

With Leghorns, probably all the pullets are allowed to mature, and the selection is done based on egg-laying (or at least laying in the nest boxes...). Trap-nesting was a big thing in 1915....

As far as Leghorn cockerels, I think the old-timers just ate them....
 
With Leghorns, I wouldn’t go by appearance so much as egg-laying. There are other breeds where I would count tail angle as important, but not Leghorns. The whole point of Mediterranean breeds is their consistent egg-laying and that they DON’T go broody....

The old-timers kept a lot of Leghorn hens and selected them using trap-nesting.

Selecting for egg-laying is a bit difficult and expensive compared to selecting heavier dual-purpose breeds for size, early maturation, and the like which can be done at 8-16 weeks.

With Leghorns, probably all the pullets are allowed to mature, and the selection is done based on egg-laying (or at least laying in the nest boxes...). Trap-nesting was a big thing in 1915....

As far as Leghorn cockerels, I think the old-timers just ate them....


Show judges don't go by how many eggs a year they lay. They alwere asking if theory think their hen was show quality and why or why not
 

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