HaikuHeritageFarm,
Here is the information. There is some information that I agree with but then there are some that I disagree with. I don't agree with where it say that the had a Walnut Comb, modified rose comb (raspberry type) would have been better.
by Craig Russell,
Following text with permission from SPPA Bulletin, 1997, 2(2):5-6
This is a bearded, muffed, walnut combed breed. . . . In the West the Orloff has been generally considered to be a Russian breed, although some modern poultry writers have concluded that they might be a German creation. Both suppositions are probably wrong. As with the naked neck and many other breeds, Germany was the land of the Orloff's perfection--not the land of its origin. And while Russia made the breed known to Western Europe and America, Persia (Iran) was the probable site of its development. However, at one time it was wide spread in Central Asia and as recently as the early eighties I saw fowl of this type while watching footage on the war in Afghanistan. The earliest mention of this breed that I know of was published in 1774. The description was obviously that of the Orloff, but at the time the breed was called Chlianskaia, which was probably a corruption of or based on Ghilan, the Persian province where the breed was most common. Its present name is probably taken from Count Orloff-Techesmensky, at one time a well-known Russian horse breeder and livestock enthusiast. This despite the fact that Orloffs were well established in Russia before his time.
The well-known English poultry writer, Edward Brown, wrongly, but probably sincerely (if not very modestly), claimed to have introduced the breed to the West in 1899.
Not surprisingly, a fowl as distinctive as the Orloff had attracted the attention of other visitors and had been known for better than thirty years in America (and elsewhere) usually simply as Russians (a name unfortunately, but not surprisingly, also applied to other breeds from the East).
These early importations were principally black--a variety not mentioned by Brown--and they had not created a great stir in poultry circles. Also judging from some of the things that Brown said about other breeds, his work was often based more upon enthusiasm than upon exhaustive knowledge. This slight lapse can be forgiven as his work popularized the breed and expanded our knowledge of Eastern breeds in general.
Nevertheless, the first North American standardization was as Russians not as Orloffs. Unfortunately interest in the breed declined and the APA dropped them from the Standard.
While I've been known to have had some association with the Orloff breed over the years, I'm not the only one to collect old standards. Several times other poultry people have told me about the Russians and about how much like Orloffs they were, except for the rose comb. It's true the APA did call the comb rose, but when you read the description it was clearly what today would be called a walnut, cushion, or strawberry comb--not a true rose comb.
When first imported from Russia, Orloffs were heavy boned, hard muscled, meat fowl that reminded Brown of Malays or Indian games (now called Cornish). However, in American and German hands they were bred more along utility lines and height was reduced and egg production was improved. Still the breed resembles the Malay and that fowl certainly was a major contributor to the Orloff's genetic makeup. Its other ancestors are less obvious and without access to Persian sources may never be authoritatively named. However, Brown stresses that this is a "powerfully built fowl, capable of defending itself in the extreme." And a German breeder once told me that this was originally a game fowl. So, muffed and bearded games, which are themselves quite old, could be at least part of the answer.
If Orloffs in the West never achieved widespread and long lasting popularity (at least outside of Germany) they were certainly popular in some areas and periodically caught the public interest.
This was one of my late friend, Vic Corson's, favorite breeds and I wish I had copied some of his material and taken notes on some of the things he told me. I do remember that in the early part of the century a hatchery here in Pennsylvania hatched Orloffs in seven colors and nothing else. It billed its home town as the Orloff capital of the world. I don't recall the town, but I believe it operated for more than twenty years and finally closed around the time of World War II.
This is an old, distinctive, and useful breed and I hope we can help get it back in the APA standard. The ABA currently recognizes three varieties. The British Standard lists four varieties--Black, Mahogany, Spangled, and White. There are at least three others--Black Breasted Red (with a Cinnamon hen), Mottled, and Buff. The last was probably an American creation and is almost certainly extinct, but, with a little effort and a Buff Chantecler, probably could be recreated. A recreation could also be attempted with a Buff Wyandotte, a Buff Cornish, or some other Buff fowl and an incredible amount of work. The ABA calls Mahogany [the] Black Tailed Red and it is roughly the same color as a Rhode Island Red. It is probably the Orloff that was the first breed to sport the solid red color. The ideal Mahogany is a brilliant, dark, reddish brown. Today this is a very rare fowl in the United States and Canada and most Mahoganies are colored like commercial Rhode Island Reds, but we can bring back the breed and the color. The future deserves an Orloff.
"An Article by Will Hally (The Russian Orloff, Feathered World Year Book 1917-1919) has a great deal to state on the breed and from one who had a lifetime connection with Russia this cannot be disregarded. The main facts from this source are:
* There was an article by the well known breeder Joseph Pettifer in The Feathered World Year Book for 1915, and this was the first written for publicity.
* The breed is dual purpose and not just a table bird as suggested by many who did not really understand that the Russians developed the fowl for its prolific egg-laying capabilities. Eggs were much more important to the Russians than table qualities. However not all strains are prolific and one poultry man understood that they laid nice sized eggs of white or tinted color, but "not a great quantity", but he only judged them and had not kept them
* In the winter months, when other breeds stopped laying, the Orloff continues to produce eggs in good numbers.
* April hatched chicks tend to started laying at the end of October and continued through the winter.
* Moulting hens come quickly back to lay as the molt was finishing so the minimum production time was lost.
* The laying capacity was high under all conditions, whether free range or backyard.
* Chicks are hardy and rear well, even in a hot, dry summer.
* The breed is classified as "heavy" but has been found to be a sitter, although this does not comply with the normal view, and one famous breeder puts it into the Sitter category as normal for a heavy breed.
* For a table breed the flesh is fine and well flavored, being quite white.
* In judging it is essential to adhere to breed characteristics (loosely termed 'Type') and place color as a secondary factor."
Above information from backyardchickens.com
Chris