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I don't think you can say they have yellow legs if getting the yellow is the result of the feed or a supplement only.
It is like the athlete that gets DQ because of the use of steriods.... It is the additive that made the difference in their performance.
I would think we would want birds that can meet the standard independently, without the use of additives.
I think short term and limited solutions are not really the answers we are after. We should be looking for answers that will work for delawares whether they free range all day OR are provided a gourmet diet in a pen.
I do understand what you are saying. I don't care how much feed I give my speckled sussex, they are never going to have yellow legs due to their genetic makeup. The difference here is that Kathy and I are both working with Delawares with the same genetic line from the same breeder. They obviously have the genetics to have the yellow legs (as mine do). That being said, how do we know that the original Delawares that the SOP was written from weren't eating a diet that would bring out the yellow legs? I may be incorrect, but it would seem to me that the standards would be written on what is considered a good representative of the best birds.
I don't think you can say they have yellow legs if getting the yellow is the result of the feed or a supplement only.
It is like the athlete that gets DQ because of the use of steriods.... It is the additive that made the difference in their performance.
I would think we would want birds that can meet the standard independently, without the use of additives.
I think short term and limited solutions are not really the answers we are after. We should be looking for answers that will work for delawares whether they free range all day OR are provided a gourmet diet in a pen.
I do understand what you are saying. I don't care how much feed I give my speckled sussex, they are never going to have yellow legs due to their genetic makeup. The difference here is that Kathy and I are both working with Delawares with the same genetic line from the same breeder. They obviously have the genetics to have the yellow legs (as mine do). That being said, how do we know that the original Delawares that the SOP was written from weren't eating a diet that would bring out the yellow legs? I may be incorrect, but it would seem to me that the standards would be written on what is considered a good representative of the best birds.