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No, they wouldn't be heritage because they're not bred to the standard anymore. A bird doesn't have to be rare to be a heritage bird. It just needs to be bred to its original purpose (which the SOP helps tell what that was) and needs to be an old breed (often considered a breed recognized by the APA before 1950)
Rhode Island Reds are a heavily commercialized breed now, but there are still heritage lines. People found a use for them to lay a LOT of eggs and have no other use, and still there are also people who breed them and use them for what they originally were supposed to be - dual purpose birds. Meaty and good in production.
Malays were never commercialized, yet they're more than often heritage. In fact, because of them never being commercialized by hatcheries, in most cases they are heritage. They're the same they were decades ago, and the reason because they're bred for the same purpose now that they were back then.
No, they wouldn't be heritage because they're not bred to the standard anymore. A bird doesn't have to be rare to be a heritage bird. It just needs to be bred to its original purpose (which the SOP helps tell what that was) and needs to be an old breed (often considered a breed recognized by the APA before 1950)
Rhode Island Reds are a heavily commercialized breed now, but there are still heritage lines. People found a use for them to lay a LOT of eggs and have no other use, and still there are also people who breed them and use them for what they originally were supposed to be - dual purpose birds. Meaty and good in production.
Malays were never commercialized, yet they're more than often heritage. In fact, because of them never being commercialized by hatcheries, in most cases they are heritage. They're the same they were decades ago, and the reason because they're bred for the same purpose now that they were back then.
I believe heritage as ALBC says it is a bird that measures up to its standard characteristics, that can reproduce naturally, that can live a long life. What are you defining as heritage that is different from this ... that a breeder would have, but not a hatchery?
Long life, being bred to the standard.
Hatcheries do not breed to the standard, they breed solely for production and quantity. They also don't breed for long life. In fact, if you get a Brahma from a hatchery, it will reach its final growth at around 7 months old. A true heritage Brahma, like most other heritage breeds, stops growing beyond a year old. And then there's production - A hatchery hen usually burns out at about 4 years old, and beyond that isn't of much use, and in many cases will die due to internal egg issues. A heritage breed will have a long productive live, yet not lay too much, thus not reaching those issues. Take the Quechua for example - The origin of Ameraucanas. . . Because the Quechua has never been commercialized, I've known people to have hens that are 20 years old and still strong.
Long life, being bred to the standard.
