Quote:
Thank you!
It's the "eye brows" they stand out. lol...
What exactly do you mean by base color? The Hen?
Your Roux looks very different than mine. It's BEAUTIFUL!!!
I think mine has more of a wild pattern to it.
The base color or perhaps foundation color is what is used to form some of the more unique mutations. Like the wild or Pharaoh color is used as the base for goldens, Italians, or Manchurian...Tibetian or British dark range is used for the Rosetta and such. Quail Lady, Joe, or JJ could explain it better than I. I know the principles and fundamentals and know which birds to breed together for what outcome I'm looking for in the offspring....but stink as genetics educator.
Guess an analogy would be, an artist before starting any painting, will add a single color to the canvas to enhance all other colors that follow....in the quail world the basic canvas' are wild pattern/ Pharaoh, British dark range, and English white...with the wild pattern being the "base color" to all other color mutations that follow.
All that to say this...A Tibetan/British dark range bird was the base color for the scarlet mutation.
Clear as mud? Hope this helps!
Clear as mud! LOL!
Thank you bfrancis!
That was actually a very good way of explaining it!
I know about painting, so understand the "base" coat!
I also understand knowing what needs to be done but explaining it is another thing. LOL! So your not alone there.
Thank you!
It's the "eye brows" they stand out. lol...
What exactly do you mean by base color? The Hen?
Your Roux looks very different than mine. It's BEAUTIFUL!!!
I think mine has more of a wild pattern to it.
The base color or perhaps foundation color is what is used to form some of the more unique mutations. Like the wild or Pharaoh color is used as the base for goldens, Italians, or Manchurian...Tibetian or British dark range is used for the Rosetta and such. Quail Lady, Joe, or JJ could explain it better than I. I know the principles and fundamentals and know which birds to breed together for what outcome I'm looking for in the offspring....but stink as genetics educator.
Guess an analogy would be, an artist before starting any painting, will add a single color to the canvas to enhance all other colors that follow....in the quail world the basic canvas' are wild pattern/ Pharaoh, British dark range, and English white...with the wild pattern being the "base color" to all other color mutations that follow.
All that to say this...A Tibetan/British dark range bird was the base color for the scarlet mutation.
Clear as mud? Hope this helps!
Clear as mud! LOL!
Thank you bfrancis!
That was actually a very good way of explaining it!
I know about painting, so understand the "base" coat!
I also understand knowing what needs to be done but explaining it is another thing. LOL! So your not alone there.
