With all due respect, I am not intending to 'rip' in to your post, but rather present a second point of view for you to consider--please be patient there are several parts.
What I have heard you say is that what the Americans are working with is not a 'Real' Cream Legbar and anything that does not meet your understanding of English breed standards is not 'real'. You have also said that the eggs should be blue (even though your own standard is for blue, green or olive) so I have to admit I am a little confused. You have politely suggested that 'we' discard everything we have and start over with 'quality' stock and were disappointed when we pushed back at you and did not want to take your advice as you are just trying to be helpful. From my point of view, the most helpful thing you could do is to volunteer to approach breeders of quality stock and convince them they need to go through all of the hoops and expense on their end to get their flock acceptable as an exporter. That is the hard part for us and if there was a readily available source or list of breeders that is able to ship to 'Joe-Shmo' in the US, 'we' could pool our resources and ship direct. Perhaps when your lovely eggies hatch and grow out next year you will be kind enough to volunteer to do this for us as we clearly need help.
What I really wanted to point our is that any breed, when imported in to a new country, will by necessity go through some adaptive change:
- One influence is breeder preference--what they think is pretty or useful. Use Marans as an example. The French standard (and they are a French breed) calls for feathered shanks yet the English version calls for clean shanks. Why the difference? Not sure. But I suspect that the Majority of English Marans breeders would take offense if a frenchman told them that they don't have 'real' Marans. There are other expamples I could go in to detail on (Brahmas and Wyandottes are American but have undergone changes in the UK and look different from the 'real' breed standard and then there are the Heritage vs German New Hampshires to look at). Now one could take a postition of all of those foreign exports as being not 'real' examples of the breed, or I suggest another approach and look at them as beautiful examples of the English or German or whatever version of the certain breed in question.
Since you brought it up, perhaps we could have a discussion sometime when you have a few days about all the variations of Araucanas--its not as simple and starighforward as you may think.
-Another change is the necessary physical adaptations that have to take place for a bird that comes from one environment and has to adapt to another. It could be that birds that are of the best type did not hatch or die in transit because they are not as hardy as a more wild-type bird ( I won't even go in to the possibility of epigenetics).
Lets compare and contrast England vs just my state in the US. England is a Goldilocks Utopia. Its climate is relatively even and that is what the Cream Legbars have been bred for/raised in. I live in Colorado (CO) on the front range. The lowest elevation in CO is about 3300ft. At 5100 feet, my home is about 1000 ft higher than the highest point in the UK. Last year my highest temp was 103 F (40 C) and my lowest was -29F (-34C) and our average annual precipitation is 15 inches total (yes its very dry here with accompanying low humidity) and we are very sunny with around 300 sunny days a year. My point is that in my location I have to have chickens that will survive and thrive in very hot and very cold weather at a higher altitude and a dry climate. If the ideal breed standard for CL can't make it in my climate, then I will have to make due with whatever hardy facsimily can survive. If what lives strays too far from breed standard it will not be a CL. But if what survives here is a darker pigmented (dark-barred) chicken that still has two copies of the cream gene and reasonably fits the breed standard, I fail to understand why it is not a CL anymore given that a clean shanked Marans is still considered a Marans.
I kindly suggest that you may want to set a spell and try to put my moccasins on, walk around and think what my point of view might be. How hard is it to import birds? How hard is it to breed birds that are not adapted to my climate? Are there examples of other breeds that have small changes and thrived in a new country with modifications from the original breed? I have always found it helpful to consider the point of view of other folks and to seek what their reality is insetad of simply cleaving to my own point of view. I appreciate you presenting your thoughts and point of view for consideration and I hope that you are willing to consider my points and perspective as well.
You put many points across
firstly I don't recall talking that CLB Must have Blue Eggs (what I have said is UK breeders strive to achieve a Blue egg as its more desirable. Green acceptable and any other colour a no no.
I will how ever disagree with adaptation. Firstly UK weather can be very erratic and we do get some very high and very low temps
The Joke in UK is the 3 Ws you can't rely on (no offence to anyone) Work [loose it at any time] Wife [Leave you at any time] and WEATHER [Can change at anytime]
and I believe that the domestic chicken is the most adapted animal in the world reaching all continents in domesticated form. as to staying the same well many introduced animals are striving in many counties unchanged and they have adapted. one I can think of is the Jackel in Australia. (or is it the Dingo) I cant recall.
as for the CLB well it has 3 main blood groups in it a Leghorn, BPR (USA Original) and Araucana of Chile (which is south America) so if the breed that punnet developed cant survive in USA im quite surprised and even further surprised that the 3 individual breeds are currently surviving
As for Marans, it has 3 standards the English marans which is clean shanked the French which is Feather Shanks and then the Bantam and are judged in their respective class. so you cant enter a French into a standard class and vice versa
And the Araucana is again in its own class for many reasons referred to as the British Tailed Araucana. The tufts bred out to make keeping them a safer hobby as we all know tufts is a lethal gene in 2 doses and I love the araucana but would take a step back at trying my hand at hatching the lethal gene variety as I couldn't take the upset. im not a araucana historian or expert but then I do believe that the rumplesness started off a mutation that was standardise in USA for the Araucana only where as UK kept it
But hey where not here to argue which country is better
I have been looking into exporting the CLB once I get them up to par for the least possible cost and may have found a way (hope immigration don't read this)
UK we have a PET passport system where you vaccinate your pet, get it tested in UK get a microchip and get issued a certificate that your pet is free from anything and get issued a pet passport literally. then you can take your pets to any county that support the PET Passport scheme which out quarantine or export import costs. just the cost of a animal plane (cargo Ticket) you can collect your pet the same day you land.
Here in UK we support animals coming in with correct document and they land and go to the ARC (Animal Reception Centre) at Heathrow Airport and you can collect same day.
Dogs get sold in this manner and get cargoed to UK for the new owner to collect.
So if USA supports that all you do is take a TRIO along that are laying and leave the Eggs that are layed behind while you are having your stay in the country. once your holiday is over all you do is take your trio back.
and in effect your not breaking any law as your doing all by the book and your animals are vaccinated and tested for illness before you leave it just all done in UK prior to leaving. or the country that originate from when coming to UK
TBH we could go into so much in so much depth and argue our valid points for ever but that not what the point it here so lets just try get along to what we can do to better the breed rather than argue
I wonder why when creating the normal Legbar their creator used the "Barred Plymouth Rock" instead of the Cuckoo or Barred Leghorn? the cuckoo leghorn traces its history way back at 1870
as far as im aware the BPR was what was available at the time in punnets flock
a lot of his documents and casework refers to what he had in his flock that he was breeding with rather than choosing particular breeds for the job
one main thing is the Autosexing an sexlink was discovered by accident (well not accident) but the birds where bred and it was after hatch and then studying that Punnet realised what he had achieved and from there went on to refine it.