Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
You would also have to eliminate the blue egg gene. Just a thought: Greenfire may have already tried this thus the green eggs showing up in some Rhodebars. Niclandia would you come over to the Norwegian Jaerhons to answer some questions? https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/8796/norwegian-jaerhon/580we would need to outsource the "Dark Barring" gene from those Dark barred Legbar roosters that Green Fire Farms carry... what is a issue for them is a gift for the Rhodebar breeders, at least for the one willing to get the "Dark Barring" gene in to their breeding pen. the Breeding would be a strait forward matter..Dark Barred Male mated to Rhodebar hens. select for the Dark colore males and breed that boy back to Rhodebar females.. from that point is only a matter of selecting for dark barred males and improving color and type while getting rid of the Legbar creast,white earlobes and the cream gene...they already have e+/e+ and B/B that is need it for Autosexing. I dont know if any of you are willing to try it
Tim the chicks you have shown are very Red enhanced, and they would make a perfect background for the double effect of Barring on the chicks,
My chicks came from a hatchery and I bred them for a darker down and darker adult plumage. Anybody can do this and it would be part of the process of breeding a rhodebar. This is part of the art and science of breeding birds.
but most rhodebars at this stage lack this type of red Enhancements... and this is Why wheaten will not make the perfect or even a good Autosexing e allele because it depends on so many genes like s+(sex linked recessive gold) Mh(Autosomal Mahogany) Autosomal Red and other enhancers found on SQ RIR,
You just posted my chicks would make a perfect background. My chicks were nothing special- I did not do any out crossing to enhance the down color- all of the genes were found in the birds I purchased from a hatchery. I simple bred them to have a darker down color before I started to make my rhodbar. This is a male with the females behind him. A female below- she is darker but the sun is making here appear lighter.
Also we need to take to account that some genes may effect the expression of homozygous barring, so all in all wheaten is not a good e allele for autosexing birds...lets take a look a bird with the closest genetic make up to the Autosexing "Rhodebar" but this bird is not Autosexing... the Delaware, their genetic make up is for males. S/S eWh/eWh Co/Co B/B mh+/mh+..... While tim's Rhodebar would be s+/s+ eWh/eWh Co/Co B/B Mh/Mh... both birds are Barred Columbian Wheaten but Tim's bird would have to have all of the genes on the same bird to make it an Autosexing bird..
It may take a little extra work to produce a wheaten bird but that is what the British Standard demands. Yes, my birds would have all of the genes needed to meet the British standard and produce an auto-sexing breed. The birds I worked with were hatchery stock and came with all the genes needed to produce an auto-sexing breed. Here is one of the first males I produced. Once again you say my birds would be autosexing- why? because they do have all the genes needed.
Sure thing, the Delaware is not auto-sexing but what does that have to do with the Rhodbar. The Delaware is not bred to be auto-sexing and is bred for a different standard. The down color of a silver wheaten delaware is completely different than a gold enhanced rhode island red.
He is not a rhodebar but something close.
This is a male and female that were what I was working toward. She is barred- the barring does not show well in the picture.
This is another example of barred red bird I was working on- he was genetically gold, birchen, columbian, dark brown restricted etc.. He is a rough looking bird but he had all the genes I was wanting in him ( not body type and a few other traits). His sisters and brothers pecked his tail ( as a chick) so it looks ugly. I had another male similar to him- but a possum killed him before I could get a picture. That male was awesome. The male below looks more like the birds on Green Fire Farms web site than my wheaten birds.
. Wildtype e+ does not have this issue at all, none of that. Silver, Mahogany, Autosomal red will not affec its autosexing traits, all you need is e+/e+ and B/B thats all... now tell me which genetic road do you wish to take? or even more, do you wish to change your birds that already carry e+ for eWh birds? infact changing your wildtype Rhodebars for Wheaten Rhodebars? all thing equal you gain nothing in terms of type and color..this is what I would do if I wanted SQ Rhodebar birds.
I have seen no evidence that anybody on this string has posted birds that are wild type and barred. This ( e+/e+, B/B or B/w) would be the crele secondary color pattern. The birds would be rhode island crele. If the birds are wild type, gold and columbian restricted they will work as rhodbar but they will not meet the British standard for undercolor.
My point is that if a bird will meet the British standard it has to be wheaten. I hope everyone who wants to breed toward the British Standard would use a wheaten based bird.
select the Best looking Wildtype Rhodebar bird you have(males would be best) keep an eye for the Best SQ or Herritage Rhode Island Red Pair you can get your hands on, the type of birds that will produce such a Rich colored donw tim showed just a few post ago..Best Rhodebar you can get. mated to a SQ RIR hen.. now this will produce good quality birds, lets see how the F1s will look. while wheaten is a very unstable e allele, sometimes completely recessive and sometimes having an effect on ER chick down(as shown by Tim Adkerson a while ago) most eWh/e+ chicks I have hatch looks Chipmunk like in down color. some may look all wheaten(not keepers) I would keep the chipmunk looking birds and keep an eye for the Barred males with a headspot.by doing this cross you will undoubtedly enhance color and Type on your current Rhodebars even if you have lose Ture Autosexability...But thats why you are keeping the Wildtype looking chicks..when the F1 chicks mature you can take the Best male and mate it back to the Rhode Island Red hen and the Best Female mate it back to the Rhode Island Red Rooster... but if you dont have enough room for two breeding pens just use the F1 males back to RIR females. again be in the Look out for Wildtype looking chicks.. after the BC1(Back Cross to Parent 1) you can use them with your mainstream Rhodebar lines..
I was under the impression this string was about creating a rhodbar that meets the British standard. The individuals on this string can do what they want to do.