I agree about outcrossing. When I got my first mille fleur cochin to hatch, a single roo, the mille fleur cochins had a TERRIBLE record for shipped eggs. Many many many buyers had zero hatches. I outcrossed to mottled cochins, then crossed offspring back to the father, and immediately had much better shipping and hatch rates, and fertility is fine, type even improved some. Two years "wasted" with lots of mottleds split to mille fleurs going to pet homes, but it was so worth it. That, plus I would sneak in a mille cochin egg in with other egg orders here and there, and people always went NUTS over them when they feathered out. That helped to get a lot more people interested in the variety too I think, people who had never considered them before. I think outcrossing takes some time, but it is worth it. One good thing about hatchery stock, they are selected for increased egg laying, fertility and being able to hatch in an artifically incubated environment. That can only help the breed to be stronger, I think. There is still time to work on type and pattern.