Yah. With all the traits Buckeyes have hardiness is the main reason I keep them.@AMERAUCANAS4REAL: That makes sense. So basically it would be pointless to mess with improving a Cornish because you'd wind up with a Buckeye.
I personally don't mind a slower-growing bird ... that was what I was trying to say. I could get very long-winded on that subject, but I won't.
Thank you.I really appreciate your informative posts.
@crazy4ChickensNducks: Thank you for your reply!I have in fact heard of Icelandics.
The two problems I have with Icies is that they're not very promising meat birds - kind of small - and that their temperaments do not sound very pleasant. Even if they're not pets, it's a lot more work and a lot less enjoyable to deal with uncooperative livestock.
I'm very interested in hardy chickens, though. After all, some meat would be better than none.
But, while I want something that won't sit by the feeder and gorge itself, I expect that, as far north as I am, I'm going to have to feed them a little anyway. I just want them to make the best possible use of the pasture I'm able to give them. I wonder if they'd murder each other if they had to be shut up during extreme cold? (Who would expect a chicken to survive -60 wind chill?)
In general they're quite rare and it's a little hard to say if they're being over-hyped.Also, that makes them hard to get.
I wonder about using them to cross over something else (to bring in color and hardiness) that would lend some meatiness and docility. Or just keeping some separate, as an internal hedge against disaster.
On -60 days, I do lock my birds up. Though they love free-ranging, they tolerate confinement.
Speaking of "hyped-up" and "long-winded" I finally ran out of things to say about Buckeyes. Only took five posts, wow...
