Hey HaplessRunner---Curtis,
You make many points with the aforementioned evaluation. I guess that I am finding myself somewhat confused by what appears to be the character of "later" GF stock and progeny. It is clear that the colors of the females have changed. I have a female that was hatched by a breeder in NC on September 18 and a female that I hatched from one of her eggs on October 12. Both of these young pullets (not pictured) are looking like Soldier's pullets. This includes the nearly black crest and the black tips in the breast area. So ... lets compare photos.
Jill Rees' "Lillian", the award winning UK CCL
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So when we place the pictures "side-by-side", what have we learned? Soldier's pullet is a beautiful bird and my two "dark ones" will be very similar, if not even darker. Yet this taking all of the above photos into consideration, how can we be so sanctimonious in our views of what the "correct color" is for what we are trying to achieve. At this point, I am almost at a loss in trying to decide what direction the breeding should go.
When one looks at the colors in the above photos, what is the correct color that should be documented in the SOP? With all the information that I had acquired as well as foundation stock, I thought that I had a decent handle on what I was trying to breed and develop. Even the colors of Jill Rees' birds are in line with my earlier conceptions. However, with the advent of this darker version of CCL pullets, I am starting to question just what our friends in the UK may have bred into cream legbars for which we are totally unaware. The occasional production of a white sport CCL is one in which I can accept and manage. These very dark CCL pullets are another story.
I would certainly like to hear others views on this!
Bear some things in mind. The photo of Lillian - may be tweaked in software like PhotoShop. That would mean that somewhere along the way--someone hit "saturate". It is even possible to set the digital camera to a more saturated photograph -- different cameras have a different name...like Vibrant Colors -- and then there is the whole light thing - was the venue of the Natioinals in 2012 lit by flourescents and the photographer had to compensate to take out the green that flourescent lights put on photos...etc. Look at the yellow of Lillian's legs and see that they are nearly egg-yolk orange as a 'tell' for photo saturation. Although the colors we see on our screens are representative, they are not the same as they would appear in 'real life' -- which is why there aren't many virtual judging contests. --
The pullet you show running free is probably closer to" correct" color and in real life --- were your pullet standing next to Lillian, it could be that they would appear to have very similar coloration.
On behalf of Judging -- judges say that they must handle the chicken--there is so much more than color (believe it or not -- LOL)---
Here's where I'm kind of confused about the taupe and brown we are seeing - in the original 1958 SOP it doesn't mention any other female body coloration that silver, and gray ( ETA of course cream is there for the nexk hackles and the crest...)---and lots of CL females have a lot of taupe. Interesting to us in English, taupe is a color, in French it is a mole...so you get an idea of the silvery-brown. \
Here's a cut and paste from the Club webpage for female color:
Comb, Face, and Wattles: Bright red.
Beak: Yellow.
Eyes: Reddish bay.
Ear-lobes: Enamel white.
Head: Plumage, cream and gray.
Crest: Cream and gray, some chestnut permissible.
Neck: Hackle—cream, softly barred gray.
Front of neck—salmon.
Wings: Fronts, Bows and Coverts—silver-gray, faintly barred.
Primaries—gray, peppered.
Secondaries—gray, very faintly barred.
Back: Gray, softly barred, feathers having a lighter shaft permissible.
Tail: Main Tail and Coverts—silver-gray, faintly barred.
Breast: Salmon, well defined in outline, some feathers having a slightly lighter shaft permissible.
Body and Fluff: Silver-gray, indistinctly barred.
Legs and Toes: Yellow.
Under-Color of All Sections: Silver-gray.
As a result, I would conclude that the more gray the female body-color is -- the more accurately the female would represent the SOP.
I also agree with you on two other points: 1. without knowing exactly what the target looks like -- it is going to be very difficult to get the bulls-eye. LOL 2. The various generations of CL that we are seeing - are certainly identifiable by the date of their launch from GFF. It is only in 2013 pullets that I have seen a plethora of the dark tipped breast feathers and there seems to be a lot of permanent white specks showing up in females also....unlike Lillian who hasn't got black tips and hasn't got white specks.
Of the possible 100 points that could be awarded to a show chicken - I think only 10 or 20 are color...so Lillian may have won for her other (non-color) qualities. Also, what I have heard is that there are not a lot of CLs in shows either in the USA or in the UK.
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