Black Penedesenca Hatching Eggs

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ChickenCanoe

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13 Years
Nov 23, 2010
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St. Louis, MO
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Hatching eggs from my flocks of this extremely rare breed.
The eggs will come in the special foam egg shippers pictured above.
Shipping and foam cost for up to 25 eggs is $20 in the continental US.
Eggs are $4 each up to 15 eggs. 16-25 eggs are $3.50 each.
I will need about 3 days advance notice to collect eggs for you depending on how many you want.

Penedesencas are not yet in the APA.
All four varieties, (Black, Crele, Partridge, Wheaten) as well as White Empordanesa were imported into the US around 2000.
The two breeds, Penedesenca being from Penedes and Empordanesa being from Emporda, are two regions of the autonomous community of Catalonia in Spain on the French border near Andorra.
Penedesencas and Empordanesas are the only breeds with white earlobes and lay a brown egg. They are also the only breeds with a carnation comb (also called a clavel and kings comb)
They are ancient breeds and were still a hodgepodge of colors as late as 1900 with black and partridge being prominent. The first known documented writing about the breed was in 1920 when efforts were made to conserve and standardize them. There were quite a few farms that raised them but fell out of favor when interest turned to new foreign breeds.
By 1980 they were nearly extinct. At that time, veterinarian Antonio Jordá visiting area farms and farmers' markets, made a collection of fertile eggs and adult specimens until he gathered a population of about 300 hens from which Dr. Amadeus Francesch standardized into the 4 Penedesenca varieties today of Black, Crele, Partridge and Wheaten.
The Black is the DP variety being about a pound or two heavier than the other three, which are egg varieties.
The black was long renown for the flavor of its meat. There is now an annual festival in Villafranca, Catalonia called Fira del Gall (Fair of the Rooster) and the Black Penedesenca is the star of the show. It is a foodie and wine affair. Penedes is the oldest wine region of Europe.
The festival dates back to medieval times but was declining in popularity till 1984 when it was reborn with the reemergence of the Black Penedesenca.
The fair is held the last weekend before Christmas and people come from far and wide to buy the bird for their Christmas dinner - a Black Penedesenca rooster. In 2014 the fair celebrated the 20th anniversary of bringing the bird back from the brink of extinction.
Sadly, Dr. Amadeu Francesch Vidal died last summer. He was very helpful trying to get the birds distributed around the world.
In Spain, the black variety has been toyed with to make it a larger meat bird. In the process, it lost the dark egg and the white lobes. So now there is the 'improved' and the classic black. The classic is the only one in the US and the variety I raise.
 
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Beautiful birds, beautigul eggs! Do they lay often? Love the story/history behind them.
Thanks. I love them. According to the ALBC, they lay very well in the neighborhood of 160+ eggs a year. I haven't gotten around to determining my exact production numbers since I have several flocks and my bird numbers go up and down dramatically. It just hasn't been easy to get the numbers verified.
 
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Hatching eggs from my flocks of this extremely rare breed.
The eggs will come in the special foam egg shippers pictured above.
Shipping and foam cost for up to 25 eggs is $20 in the continental US.
Eggs are $4 each up to 15 eggs. 16-25 eggs are $3.50 each.
I will need about 3 days advance notice to collect eggs for you depending on how many you want.

Penedesencas are not yet in the APA.
All four varieties, (Black, Crele, Partridge, Wheaten) as well as White Empordanesa were imported into the US around 2000.
The two breeds, Penedesenca being from Penedes and Empordanesa being from Emporda, are two regions of the autonomous community of Catalonia in Spain on the French border near Andorra.
Penedesencas and Empordanesas are the only breeds with white earlobes and lay a brown egg. They are also the only breeds with a carnation comb (also called a clavel and kings comb)
They are ancient breeds and were still a hodgepodge of colors as late as 1900 with black and partridge being prominent. The first known documented writing about the breed was in 1920 when efforts were made to conserve and standardize them. There were quite a few farms that raised them but fell out of favor when interest turned to new foreign breeds.
By 1980 they were nearly extinct. At that time, veterinarian Antonio Jordá visiting area farms and farmers' markets, made a collection of fertile eggs and adult specimens until he gathered a population of about 300 hens from which Dr. Amadeus Francesch standardized into the 4 Penedesenca varieties today of Black, Crele, Partridge and Wheaten.
The Black is the DP variety being about a pound or two heavier than the other three, which are egg varieties.
The black was long renown for the flavor of its meat. There is now an annual festival in Villafranca, Catalonia called Fira del Gall (Fair of the Rooster) and the Black Penedesenca is the star of the show. It is a foodie and wine affair. Penedes is the oldest wine region of Europe.
The festival dates back to medieval times but was declining in popularity till 1984 when it was reborn with the reemergence of the Black Penedesenca.
The fair is held the last weekend before Christmas and people come from far and wide to buy the bird for their Christmas dinner - a Black Penedesenca rooster. In 2014 the fair celebrated the 20th anniversary of bringing the bird back from the brink of extinction.
Sadly, Dr. Amadeu Francesch Vidal died last summer. He was very helpful trying to get the birds distributed around the world.
In Spain, the black variety has been toyed with to make it a larger meat bird. In the process, it lost the dark egg and the white lobes. So now there is the 'improved' and the classic black. The classic is the only one in the US and the variety I raise.
They look great. I know you’ve been working with them for some time. Glad to see it coming together for you. What are the weights of yours?
 
APHIS currently has an import restriction for poultry from Israel due to HPAI.
https://www.aphis.usda.gov/aphis/ou...ion/import-live-animals/ct_hp_avian_influenza
There may also be restrictions due to exotic ND.
https://www.aphis.usda.gov/aphis/ou...port-live-animals/ct_exotic_newcastle_disease
Eggs would be the best bet. Any live poultry (if not from a restricted country) have to be quarantined in a government facility for 30 days. That's expensive and in addition to all the vet certificates and inspections.
https://www.aphis.usda.gov/aphis/ou...a_entry_requirements/sa_avian/ct_poultry_eggs
 
APHIS currently has an import restriction for poultry from Israel due to HPAI.
https://www.aphis.usda.gov/aphis/ou...ion/import-live-animals/ct_hp_avian_influenza
There may also be restrictions due to exotic ND.
https://www.aphis.usda.gov/aphis/ou...port-live-animals/ct_exotic_newcastle_disease
Eggs would be the best bet. Any live poultry (if not from a restricted country) have to be quarantined in a government facility for 30 days. That's expensive and in addition to all the vet certificates and inspections.
https://www.aphis.usda.gov/aphis/ou...a_entry_requirements/sa_avian/ct_poultry_eggs
That is a big Bureaucratic headache!
 

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