It's a momentous occasion when Steen & nicalandia agree.
I'm rather with 1Muttsfan here. Posted these two questions with the silver-looking - "genetically correct " CL picture elsewhere.
1. Why would anyone go through Cream to get silver-looking bird? If there is no visual difference between a silver-crested Legbar and a Cream Legbar - then what is the value-added of Cream?
2. If Cream is identical to silver, how did Punnett ever find a Cream in the first place?
Interestingly - there is a bird walking the soil of the USA, and has been for a few years now. It doesn't look silver, and yet, it cannot be a gold Legbar because it has a crest and lays eggs from the blue-genetics.
Does this mean that we have a new breed in the USA? If the super-pale version is correct for a Cream Legbar - then do we have a new bird??
Shall we name it the American Legbar?, Punnett Legbar (since it seems to combine 2 out of 3 of the breeds) if indeed it is not a Cream Legbar, How about the Colorful Legbar, or maybe the Independence-Day Legbar since it is different from the UK ancestor.
If Gold Legbar was an ancestor of Cream Legbar, then Cream Legbar would be an ancestor of this new variety. Hmmmm Since it has been breeding true for coloration in the USA for over a year, it is a year ahead of the silver one called Cream Legbar. Perhaps it would get APA acceptance first.
This would resolve a lot of problems
The SOP would be nearly identical to the current draft of CL sop.. It would read that no chestnut is a DQ, and some chestnut is required, some gold allowed.
I'm rather with 1Muttsfan here. Posted these two questions with the silver-looking - "genetically correct " CL picture elsewhere.
1. Why would anyone go through Cream to get silver-looking bird? If there is no visual difference between a silver-crested Legbar and a Cream Legbar - then what is the value-added of Cream?
2. If Cream is identical to silver, how did Punnett ever find a Cream in the first place?
Interestingly - there is a bird walking the soil of the USA, and has been for a few years now. It doesn't look silver, and yet, it cannot be a gold Legbar because it has a crest and lays eggs from the blue-genetics.
Does this mean that we have a new breed in the USA? If the super-pale version is correct for a Cream Legbar - then do we have a new bird??
Shall we name it the American Legbar?, Punnett Legbar (since it seems to combine 2 out of 3 of the breeds) if indeed it is not a Cream Legbar, How about the Colorful Legbar, or maybe the Independence-Day Legbar since it is different from the UK ancestor.
If Gold Legbar was an ancestor of Cream Legbar, then Cream Legbar would be an ancestor of this new variety. Hmmmm Since it has been breeding true for coloration in the USA for over a year, it is a year ahead of the silver one called Cream Legbar. Perhaps it would get APA acceptance first.
This would resolve a lot of problems
- no need to do double mating to get the correct bird of each sex. The sexual dimorphism is already correct.
- larger genetic pool since the silver-looking birds have a smaller gene pool
- People who have been rejected because their birds are too golden can be brought into the fold
- No confusion with other light barred breeds but rather instant recognition for the new variety of Legbar
- People who prefer more color would be pleased
The SOP would be nearly identical to the current draft of CL sop.. It would read that no chestnut is a DQ, and some chestnut is required, some gold allowed.
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