0589d453_Oct26029.jpeg

Old English Game Bantam

The Old English Game bantam is a delightful breed of chicken. It is a small, pugnacious, and...
Pros: small size, tons of colors
Cons: must be dubbed for show
OEGB are great birds for in the city or to take to shows. Also good for learning genetics as their are so many color varieties. They are very tame and good for kids.
Purchase Price
50.00
Purchase Date
2000-06-04
  • Like
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
Pros: can be gentle to owner,
Cons: agresive, roosters very protective of hens
My rooster is sweet to me unless i get near his hens. my hen is top in the coop and wont back down. they can be agressive to other birds and humans but not to their main owner
Purchase Price
9.00
  • Like
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
Pros: friendly, entertaining
Cons: delicate because of size, small eggs
I've had three Old English hens, but never a rooster. All three were our family favorites. They are just fun to watch and have more personality than you would anticipate given their size. The one I have now, "Teeny" is energetic and sweet. She won't come when called yet, but she will let me scoop her up easily.
  • Like
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
I have had OEGB for years now. They really are some of the best little chickens I have had so far! I usually bought mixed ones but I'm now getting into the purebred ones. My little boy has a young Speckled pair right now and I have a Blue Brassy Back Rooster, a Blue Hen and a Lemon Blue Hen. My hens are young and not laying yet but I cant wait till they do!

This is My Blue Brassy Back, My Favorite LiL Roo Yet!!


My Lemon Blue Hen


And My Blue Hen
  • Love
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
Pros: Calm, easy to tame, pretty
Cons: Can be mean to other chickens
I got an OEGB by chance about three weeks ago; it only took an hour for her to be top hen of my little flock. (11 chickens)
She even bosses my two roosters around.. It's sorta funny watching the little bantum go after a big blue cochin and win. XD

  • Haha
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
Pros: Eat very little, good foragers, pretty, alert, generally healthy
Cons: Can fly, a little nervous or standoffish.
I've got 5 of these guys that are not at all near perfection of the standard, but I didn't buy for show. If you are looking for a chicken that can roam and hold his own, this is the breed. They are alert, don't eat much, great at foraging, and require less care than my EEs. They like to roam and I took 1/2 of a flock out of a confined situation. The other half was very depressed and they succumbed to feather picking and aggression at a population density of 10sq. ft per bird. If you are going to keep them in a run, have plenty of space. I know they can be aggressive but my Rooster is very gentle and bit lazy. He isn't very friendly though, not a lap rooster, nor are any of the hens, but they were raised with little contact with people. I can get them to eat out of my hand, but thats about it. Early intervention is helpful. Their size is great as well, not huge but not too tiny.

Egg laying is what I would consider okay. 2-3 per week, small to medium eggs. The yolk ratio in mine is huge and they are my favorite egg to eat!

In short, alert, quick, comical, full of personality, pretty, very hardy, healthy, heat tolerant and economic but require space and probably a bit of a coin toss as to aggression. Handle early and if you don't mind less egg production than laying breeds, you got a great bird.
  • Like
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
Pros: beautiful, friendly, curious
Cons: can be broody (if this is something you don't want), can fly very well and high
Along with the Speckled Sussex, our OEG bantam is our favorite of seven breeds. She is such a sweet little thing with a lovely voice. She is the only bantam in the flock and often forages alone or apart from the others, but is not picked on. We just love this little bird! She's a good layer and her eggs are surprisingly large (given her tiny body size). There are only two drawbacks for us though. Before we clipped her wings, she'd fly up onto the neighbor's garage. We were nervous about this for a number of reasons (the neighbor has dogs being one). She is also very broody. Lately she's been escaping from the chicken run and making a nest in the front yard under the bushes. At first I thought she'd been carried away by a hawk or cat, but found her sitting on her little nest. She had covered four eggs with leaves and was sitting on them. We don't have a rooster and it breaks my heart to see how badly she wants to parent! I put the eggs in the coop nest for a day, then substituted plastic Easter eggs for them. Am hoping she won't try to escape again! I HIGHLY recommend this breed.
  • Like
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
Pros: Great layers, friendly, beautiful, ability to fly well can be good for people in rural areas.
Cons: Eggs are small, ability to fly well can be bad for people in suburban/urban areas.
I love my OEGBs. They are absolutely beautiful, and very friendly too! My OEG hens are surprisingly great layers of white eggs, but they are small. Also they can fly very well. That can be positive for people in rural areas that need a bird that can withstand predators, but a negative for people in the suburbs or urban areas (which wing trimming can easily fix). I give these birds five stars, since I don't care about how large the eggs are and need a bird that can withstand predators.
  • Like
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
Pros: Cuddly, sweet, they lay well, friendly, and I could go on, and on, and on!
Cons: They can fly really well, so for people in rural areas, wing trimming is a must.
Wonderful little birds. They make me smile every time I see them. They are beautiful, and are surprisingly good layers for their size.

I would recommend this breed to anyone who wants a cute, cuddly, small backyard chicken.
big_smile.png
They are just that great.




  • Love
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
Pros: Great mom!
Cons: Very aggressive
I have one OEGH that magically arrived in my yard some how. She is not very tame and it was very hard to catch her to put her in a pen when I first found her in my yard. She is very aggressive. She killed eight of my young Delewares, and one of my Buff Orpingtons. It is very hard to introduce new hens into the pen because she immediately shows her dominance and is ruthless unless the chicken stands up for itself and fights back. The only reason I still even have her is because I can depend on babies every spring. She is a great mom, teaches her babies to look up at the sky to check for hawks, how to take dust bathes, and roost up high at night to avoid predators. Thankfully the tree she picks to roost in is only eight ft off the ground so I can always catch her and put her back in her pen at night. Her babies are very sweet and friendly, thankfully not exhibiting their moms aggression. When sitting I have to use a stick to remove eggs or she will draw blood if you try and take her eggs from her by hand, and don't even think about trying to pick up one of her babies she will attack anything that she thinks is a threat to her babies. Ok egg layer of light brown eggs.
  • Like
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
Pros: Gorgeous lawn decoration, quite small, good layers, good pets if handled at a young age
Cons: Cocks/roosters can be quite aggressive, hens and roosters alike are prone to frostbite
The Old English Game Bantam is a breed of chicken. Pure Old English Game Bantams are highly prized by poultry breeders and fanciers, and therefore, they can sell for quite a lot of money, if the breeder/seller knows what s/he's doing.

The Old English Game Bantam is one of the oldest strains of poultry breeds that have been used for cockfighting. Through the Middle Ages, the breed was developed and bred by the English Nobility, into many varying colors, traits desirable for cockfighting were chosen by breeders. Cockfighting became illegal in Britain and Australia in the 1850s and English game fowl are usually kept just by poultry enthusiasts. Today the breeds are used at poultry exhibitions and breeders try to develop stock that will win prizes.
(That part was taken from Wikipedia. I don't own it.)


There are many varieties of the Old English Game Bantam, making it even more appealing. The following varieties are all recognized.


Old English Game Black - 1938 Game Bantam

Old English Game Black - Breasted Red 1925 Game Bantam

Old English Game Black Tailed Buff - 2004 Game Bantam

Old English Game Blue - 1976 Game Bantam

Old English Game Blue - Brassy Back 1996 Game Bantam

Old English Game Blue - Breasted Red 1965 Game Bantam

Old English Game Blue - Golden Duckwing 1965 Game Bantam

Old English Game Blue Silver Duckwing - 1965 Game Bantam

Old English Game Brassy Back - 1990 Game Bantam

Old English Game Brown Red - 1960 Game Bantam

Old English Game Columbian - 1996 Game Bantam

Old English Game Crele 1976 - Game Bantam

Old English Game Cuckoo 1977 - Game Bantam

Old English Game Fawn Silver Duckwing - 1998 Game Bantam

Old English Game Ginger Red - 1982 Game Bantam

Old English Game Golden Duckwing - 1938 Game Bantam

Old English Game Lemon Blue - 1965 Game Bantam

Old English Game Mille Fleur - 1998 Game Bantam

Old English Game Quail - 1988 Game Bantam

Old English Game Red Pyle - 1946 Game Bantam

Old English Game Self Blue - 1965 Game Bantam

Old English Game Silver Blue - 1996 Game Bantam

Old English Game Silver Duckwing - 1938 Game Bantam

Old English Game Spangled - 1925 Game Bantam

Old English Game Wheaten (female) - 1943 Game Bantam

Old English Game Wheaten (male) - 1949 Game Bantam

Old English Game White - 1938 Game Bantam

Thanks for reading! Please comment, and let me know if any of the information is invalid!
yippiechickie.gif
  • Like
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
Pros: Cute, Smart, Very pretty, can be easy to train, and good for showing
Cons: Can fly to almost everywhere, noisy when scared, slow egg production
I have three Old english game bantams that i have had for a year. They are very smart and only come to me when i have treats but mine are scared off easily. My rooster has great instincts and takes care of his girls very well, and the hens make great babies, though they fly over a fence as if is was a two inch step. Can make great pets and good mothers.
  • Like
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
Pros: Sweet birds
Cons: none
The sweetest rooster I have ever had.
  • Like
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
Pros: Pretty, soft, kind, cuddly, can fly
Cons: small eggs
I have 1 OEGB that I got from TSC. When we were there, the entire brood of assorted bantams had just arrived. Aparently, the truck driver stopped at a hotel for the night (atleast, I think that's what the person said) and forgot them in the truck overnight with no food, water, and heat. Keep in mind, this was early April, and it was super cold. Two chicks of an unknown breed were already dead, and several others looked nearly there. then.... We heard splashing. Of course, only my dopey little girl would be running through the water, half drowning herself
roll.png
(thankfully, she has become considerably smarter over these past 9 months) she looked like a (wet) chipmunk! She was running around, eating and drinking, and was totally hyper. We just couldn't leave without the adorable little girl.

Soon, Chipmunk went out into the coop, and was flying out of the pen! And the fence has to be around six feet tall! So, my dad put chicken wire over the top. Now we don't have any more escaping problems.

Whenever I enter the pen, she rushes to me and jumps on my shoulder. (Or head, or back, or arm, she's not picky) And I end up doing the chicken chores with her sitting on me. She loves being cuddled, and is always sweet to everyone.
I don't have a big problem with how small the eggs are. (I think of chickens as 'pets with benefits') But my flock leader, Sky, can't stand her it seems. Chipmunk kept getting pecked on the face, (Or in her eyes, or beak... Sky isn't very picky either.) But, at the end of the night, they make amends.
I sometimes see her snuggled up under my large Buff Orpington, Q's, wing at night.

Here's some pictures of her:
Snuggling with her BFF (Best Feathered Friend) Hershey. (Chipmunk is on the left)


Chipmunk in the snow.

Chipmunk eating. (The white chicken is Sky, the BO closest to Hershey is Q)

Chipmunk giving Q her queen-like glare.

Chipmunk standing on a hay bale.

And flying off.
  • Love
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
Pros: Its a chicken
Cons: Small
I think it is good because its a chickens and not another bird
  • Like
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
Pros: Amazingly freindly, small, beautiful, adorable, NOT AGRESSIVE AT ALL, overall amazing!
I think I might have to say that this is my favorite breed of chicken. They are so amazingly beautiful! They make wonderful pets and are great for children. My OEGB boys are the sweetest little things and love to be held. I love having little OEGB roosters but big standard/medium sized hens. Theses chickens are the best.
I LOVE this breed.
  • Like
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
Pros: small, feisty, sweet, playful
Cons: can be kinda cocky
I don't have any fullblooded game birds but the ones I have are half OE's & half Nankins, they're incredibly sweet :) & goreous!
  • Like
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
Pros: everything
Cons: bit noisy
Cant say anything truly bad about these guys.
  • Like
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
I was given a Red Pyle Old English Game rooster from a boy that used the chick in a school project. Being as it was a rooster, the family was not able to keep him in their community. We have since named him "Whoop-***" because he is the boss of the flock! His hens are all standard size so it is amusing to watch him flaunt around. He even protects his ladies from our Dark Brahma rooster! He can fly far distances I've noticed which could be beneficial to escape predators.


Purchase Price
0.00
Purchase Date
2011-07-01
  • Love
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
Pros: Very Friendly; Sometimes Broody
Cons: Boisterous
First of all, not a bird for you if you want a quiet backyard flock. I would go and look at a different breed, because the Old English will tell you everything on its mind. I have owed a few, though currently only one, a Rooster, who lives in my garage so iv had plenty of experience with their noisiness. Other than that though, my all time favorite breed, hands down. From my experiences, friendlier than Silkies, and seem more genuine about their friendliness. Very smart. I'm surprised my roo has not learned to open his pen yet. An excellent starter bird, but roosters will fight other roosters and aggressive hens, most of the time to the death, so watch an integrated flock carefully if mature or near mature birds are being introduced.
  • Like
Reactions: bantamsrmyfav
Back
Top Bottom