Oh my Adonis cannot go out like that....knit him a sweater Cyn, that boy has no feathers. LOL Then Knockout...is it worth buying anymore? If so, I am still sending you monies to bring some with you. If you think it is not, let me know
Nick, Cyn is right. Fattie does not look like a dwarf because she is not a dwarf but she carries 2 dwarf genes.
My former vet in Oregon has been studying the dwarf gene in poultry and when he came out for a farm visit, I spoke to him about Cannonball who is very small for a Dellie and thinking she might be a dwarf, of the kind without the deformaties, he took blood samples from both Cannonball and Fattie for DNA sequencing and gene study. Cannonball is fine and dandy but Fattie has 2 dwarf genes. As it turns out, his studies were showing that for a dwarf to be produced, it did not require each parent having the gene, a single parent can pass it and pass more than one dwarf gene. As was the case with Fattie.
By process of elimination, the combination of Isaac and Kira was throwing dwarfs...there were several dwarfs thrown during that time and before Cynthia got her new hens...Had it been Ike with the gene, and my vet being correct, then all of the hens at that time would have thrown dwarfs here and there. But only Kira was throwing them and at least one of her offspring, Fattie, was given 2 dwarf genes. So somewhere in Kira's line there is a dwarf gene carrier. and if memory serves me correctly, she and Ike are from different lines.
He is doing a 5 and 10 year closed study with 50 different pairs and different breeds. Once those studies is complete, his findings will be turned in and published. He was originally going to publish paper on his findings, including Fattie but after consideration and talking with experts and the Vet Boards, he decided to do the closed studies.
He also explained that breeds that were "made" and died out and "re-made", throws genetics into a tailspin because the birds used originally to create the breed are no more so in remaking a breed, you are getting a completely different genetic combination and pairing. The lines over the years have changed so much due in part to piss poor breeding, adding other breeds to try to 'improve' the lines and so forth, that todays Delaware are nothing like the Delaware of the early 1900s. It is sort of like playing genetic roulette. It is hard to recreate what you once destroyed and expect the same results. Because the Delaware were no more, they were extinct as a breed until someone read about them and how they were made and started the project over again with birds 40+ generations out. He makes perfect sense to me...man often destroys something and screws up trying to correct it.
But he advised against breeding Fattie because all of her offspring will be dwarfs or carry the dwarf gene. The carriers would be the real problem because they would continually pass on the dwarf gene and then you have the gene spreading from flock to flock. So, I would never breed Delaware because of that....I only have her and Cannonball. If I did breed Fattie, the gene would stay in my laying flock because I put all of her eggs in the "eating" basket and do not give them away or sell them. The Del cross Sarah hatched was from Cannonball which I grabbed thinking it was my Orp, Maya's egg (her egg and Cannonball's are almost identical in color, size and etc) and it is a HUGE baby.