x2That post reads like a Greek tragedy. So sad...![]()
We need to... no... we have to fix that.
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x2That post reads like a Greek tragedy. So sad...![]()
We need to... no... we have to fix that.
Yeah, Toni's second bird was a cull sale bird. It's common enough to just coop in stuff like that than it is to mess around on the sales floor sometimes. LF Reds are rare in the NorthEast. At the largest, most prestigious North East Poultry Congress, there were only 3 LF Reds this past year.
In case folks doubt just how rare these LF Reds have become, that's about all you need to know. In the region where the bird was first created and named after a state in that region as well. Three, just three LF Reds in show. Says it all pretty much.
Focus on learning the breed and getting into a position to breed quality birds. That's what all this MUST be about. Dozens of breeds have ceased to exist in meaningful quality and in enough numbers that one could pronounce them virtually gone. May be some breeds do need to go extinct. Maybe there is not enough interest in Large Fowl anymore. I don't know.
For certain, preservation and growing more interest in the venerable Rhode Island Red was the purpose of this thread's creation.
Quote:
Here the shows are mostly Silkies.
I can see where bantams would appeal to more people because smaller birds with smaller appetites can be fit in larger numbers in smaller places. Most people would rather buy their chickens already packaged rather than go through all the trouble of raising meat birds from chicks. It's just more "convenient". People who want "pretty birds" buy ornamental breeds, and people who want backyard layers buy birds focused on egg production. In other words, people are just plain lazy. Just my 2c...Focus on learning the breed and getting into a position to breed quality birds. That's what all this MUST be about. Dozens of breeds have ceased to exist in meaningful quality and in enough numbers that one could pronounce them virtually gone. May be some breeds do need to go extinct. Maybe there is not enough interest in Large Fowl anymore. I don't know.
For certain, preservation and growing more interest in the venerable Rhode Island Red was the purpose of this thread's creation.
At least where I am, the interest is definetly there. So many people ask me where I got my bird and if I sell such birds. It isn't really a matter of interest for them, it's a matter of getting such birds.