DiVon80: . . . I had poultry most of my life. You know how I know a persons experience with breeding is: Beginners only see the faults..They don't have the experience to see good type. There are no perfect animals. Just good representatives. Every animal you put on the planet will have some fault. Its up to you to limit them...A new breed: you have 4 with funky feet 2 with good. Put down the deformed birds nurture the correct ones. Log all this info. down. If you keep, keeping deformed birds as food egg layers when you finally have acess to quality you wont have the space or money to purchase. If you want to be a breeder you have to love the breed more then the individual. And you will have to cull. Thats why buying eggs is like buying a fetus. You only have the parents to look at. And that is if you are lucky. A pedigree is a description of particular individuals. As a rule you will know more about your babies from their grandparents.
First, let me say that I am not a Marans breeder, I don't have Marans and do not have a dog in this hunt. I agree with you there are no perfect specimens. Your advice is good advice except I differ with your definition of persons experienced in breeding as follows: I would add that it is important not just to keep birds that are the best representative of the breeds but to also, it is most important to keep diversity in your line.
"A point on proper terms which may be useful for some readers of this thread. Many people use bloodline and strain interchangeably. Bloodline is a term which describes a population of birds, somewhat related, under the care of one breeder. Strain is a term which describes a population of birds, somewhat related, under the care of several breeders in several locations. In other words, your flock is your bloodline; when I buy birds from you and raise them without introducing other stock I am now working with your strain. After three years I could legitimately claim my birds as my bloodline of your strain. "
First, let me say that I am not a Marans breeder, I don't have Marans and do not have a dog in this hunt. I agree with you there are no perfect specimens. Your advice is good advice except I differ with your definition of persons experienced in breeding as follows: I would add that it is important not just to keep birds that are the best representative of the breeds but to also, it is most important to keep diversity in your line.
"A point on proper terms which may be useful for some readers of this thread. Many people use bloodline and strain interchangeably. Bloodline is a term which describes a population of birds, somewhat related, under the care of one breeder. Strain is a term which describes a population of birds, somewhat related, under the care of several breeders in several locations. In other words, your flock is your bloodline; when I buy birds from you and raise them without introducing other stock I am now working with your strain. After three years I could legitimately claim my birds as my bloodline of your strain. "
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