Selecting A Breed And Getting A Start
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From Starting Right With Poultry by G. T. Klein. Current price $3.50. Reprinted by permission of Garden Way Publishing, Rt. F-5, Charlotte, Vt. 05445.
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by G.T. KLEIN
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One of my greatest inspirations for MOTHER goes
back to about 19 , when I started seeing those great ads
for the HAVE-MORE Plan ("A Little Land, A Lot of Living")
which used to run in the mechanics magazines. The actual
HAM Plan, of course, turned people on to more specialized
books that taught neophytes how to raise cows, goats,
rabbits, geese, and other homestead livestock. Here's a
selection from one of those books,
StartingRight With
Poultry.—JS
The breed of chicken that you select for your backyard
flock should be the one that has the very best
qualifications that you can find for producing eggs and
poultry meat.
The dual purpose breeds seem to be the most popular among
homesteaders, and the productive type Rhode Island Reds
appear to be the first choice. The Red is followed by the
Barred Plymouth Rock. These certainly are two of the most
practical breeds that could be selected. There are, of
course, others that are quite well suited. The White
Plymouth Rock has many good qualifications, and the New
Hampshire is an excellent breed, though many people think
of the Rhode Island Red and New Hampshire as being the
same. The White Leghorn is a most efficient layer and a
good choice, though nervous and admittedly not as good for
meat production. The eggs are white.
The crosses of the Rhode Island Red and the Barred Plymouth
Rock must not be omitted from the preferred list. When
Barred Rock females are crossed with Rhode Island Red
males, the pullets will be largely black in color with some
red or brown feathers on the neck and perhaps on the body.
In the cross made using the Rhode Island Red female and the
Barred Rock male, both pullets and cockerels would be
barred very much like Barred Plymouth Rocks. These pullets
would also make good layers and would be a good choice. The
cockerels from this cross grow exceedingly well and are a
favorite of the broiler growers.
There is a definite reason why the improved breeds
recommended here will produce more efficiently than many
others that might be selected. High egg production is an
inherited characteristic. Just like eye color or baldness
in humans, the ability to lay large numbers of eggs is
transmitted from one generation to another. Just as in your
garden, you do not expect a highly improved variety of
vegetables when you plant seed of unimproved varieties.
Inheritance is inescapable.
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