Roger she is a very pretty girl!
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X's 2!!!!I collected the first egg for my Partridge project today.![]()
My big Splash boy Neville is penned with Prudence, a hen that is the result of an English Splash Orpington roo crossed with a Buff Orp hen.
I'm breeding this pair in hopes of coaxing out any hidden genes that might be in my English line, with the intention of replicating the breeding that produced Prudence. She is pretty distinctly marked and I'm crossing my fingers that her offspring have a even clearer marked Partridge pattern to their feathers.
I plan on collecting 4 eggs at a time and then setting them, I'll probably do this until I have at least a dozen eggs incubating.
Here's to wishing for Partridge marked babies in just a few weeks!![]()
i cant get over the beautiful head on that hen Jeremy..and color..hope it all goes well, cant wait to see your babies..
Dave,
Yes, there are many forms of AI. The testing currently used by the USDA will react to all of them. If one has a positive reactor, then further testing is needed to determine which strain it is. I think the problem with the birds imported that have been destroyed is that the USDA requires that the birds not be vaccinated for AI. A positive reactor would either indicate vaccination or exposure to AI and I believe AI is one of those diseases that the bird remains a carrier for life. Therefore you are risking exposure to the birds in the US by allowing birds in that react positively to the test.
I agree no amount of money could replace birds on various breeders farms. The lines would be lost forever. But the alternative you would face would be to have all your birds destroyed and nothing to show for it at all. That is the way our government works and I am sure if there is an outbreak in the US, "they" (men in white suits and astronaut helmets breathing like Darth Vader) will be going door to door checking for birds within a certain mile radius and everything will be destroyed regardless.
This is also a good reason to have partners to share your flock with if you are an avid breeder. Someone within reasonable distance, yet far enough away to CYA.
FYI,
Note to all out there. The USDA does NOT require pullorum testing or pullorum free status on birds coming into the US....... WTH???????
I collected the first egg for my Partridge project today.![]()
My big Splash boy Neville is penned with Prudence, a hen that is the result of an English Splash Orpington roo crossed with a Buff Orp hen.
I'm breeding this pair in hopes of coaxing out any hidden genes that might be in my English line, with the intention of replicating the breeding that produced Prudence. She is pretty distinctly marked and I'm crossing my fingers that her offspring have a even clearer marked Partridge pattern to their feathers.
I plan on collecting 4 eggs at a time and then setting them, I'll probably do this until I have at least a dozen eggs incubating.
Here's to wishing for Partridge marked babies in just a few weeks!![]()