Does anyone know if their hatch days stay the same year to year? Or at least relatively?
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I don't know why people keep wanting to turn Sand Hill into Murray McMurray or something. They are not a hatchery. They are breed preservationists. They make very little money and they do this because they care about the breeds. Glenn participates in genetic research studies, he speaks at conferences, he knows genetics and APA standards. You see MM doing anything like that?
Sand Hill is trying to stand at a very important place - think of them like a seed bank. They are trying to create sustainable populations for the long-term health of a breed. They are NOT growing up show birds or promising show results. That's because consistent show results require inbreeding and the loss of genetic diversity and production. Every strategy you've ever read or been told about how to create a show flock is some variation on "inbreed like crazy." When you buy from a proven show breeder, you're paying money for the results of their inbreeding strategy. The production value of an inbred flock is much lower than a diverse flock. The resistance to disease of an inbred flock is much lower than a diverse flock. That's the genetic price you pay for getting consistent show results.
Inbreeding and selecting for feathering and shank color (rather than for hardiness and egg production and egg character) is the opposite of what Sand Hill does, so they're not going to be a source of an instant show flock. They are also NOT providing fad breeds to backyard pet owners who only want cool colors and interesting names and who do not want to know anything about agriculture except where to write a credit card number. That's where MM and the other pet hatcheries come in. And yes, those hatcheries will give you better communication and an instant hatching date. But they pay their phone bank workers by drop-shipping you birds who are genetically close to useless (except, honestly, their EEs, which seem to be from a very old flock and are probably the best thing from a sustainability perspective that MM sells) and I know they're culling chicks like crazy so they can have enough for those instant orders.
I've waited for those phone calls from Linda too - though they've been VERY good about calling me when the chicks have shipped. I've never not been alerted 2-3 days in advance. I don't like having to write a check and lick a stamp either. But it's always been more than worth it when the box comes and the chicks look like actual breeds and grow up to lay and act like actual breeds.