- Mar 4, 2012
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Quote:
Such a thing could be arranged, yes.
Will you be going to Delmarva at the end of the month?
Such a thing could be arranged, yes.
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Will you be going to Delmarva at the end of the month?
OK, heres the deal.
I have 3 what seem to be BR Shamo stags, I bought hatching eggs last year on e-bay, and they were sold to me as Thai gamefowl.
However, they are dead on to the pictures and descriptions for Shamo in the APA standard, and I showed a pullet at NEPC, and she got 2nd place (no DQ, which is what I was expecting)
I happen to love these boys, but I really need to get rid of at least one.
They are getting too aggressive to my flock of wimpy chickens, and I have seen them get switched on to the kill mode. This is not something I can deal with right now.
What is strange to me, is after I pulled Dragon, the alpha roo, off of the bloodied mess he made, he was not aggressive to me, it was like he was just doing his job, and I just interrupted him like he was reading a magazine. Very impressive, but I am not prepared for this.
I will most likely be entering them at Delmarva, with the intent of selling at least one or two.
I will get pics to follow up, I know you, or anyone, would like to see them.
The largest one is now 24" tall, and 7 lbs, at 10 months old.
I would rather have someone on BYC give them a good home.
Roberta
My Shamo Stag will try to fight my Orpington Breeding Roosters through hardware cloth. I had to stop letting that Orp Breeding pen out to free range because he was really irritating my Shamo stag. He is really friendly towards me and is very docile. My hens are still a young but not really flighty but lay pretty good hen they don't try to sit on eggs! Are O Shamos good mothers? What about KO Shamo? Are they good mothers?
Nate
x2 to that.
Even when I had my last stag running loose around the yard, his "gameiness" led him to fight any rooster he could find through a fence, one who got severely injured. Not by him, but by fighting through the fence. All the ramming and pecking and kicking got his face very beat up and his toes pretty bloody.
So, my Shamos are completely separate and penned now. There's a single fence that separates my current stag from rather "gamey" Araucanas but he's very young right now and I'm working on a second fence to widen the boundary between the two in the mean time.
Shamo, Thai, whatever - They are indeed bred for one thing and one thing only. Which means that after all the hundreds of years, that's really all they will think about most of the time.
Answering the Shamo mothering - Only have experience so far with one gal, and honestly, she had to learn first. She somehow let a cat sneak by and steal several chicks before finally defending the remaining ones quite strongly.
Now, I've got a neighbor though with some Thais - Feisty mothers!!! Very smart and fast learners too. But I'll be honest I'm only assuming they are thai based on their appearance and where they came from however there's a chance they could be Ga Noi too. All I know is, the guy complains that even the hens at a very very young age will fight each other to the death. I don't know Thai temperament very well but I do know Ga Nois do that. The guy has no clue really, he just raises them as backyard chickens. When I saw them I figured they have to be Thais or something, he told me they came from a friend who brought them from Vietnam. (parent stock) The current ones I was looking at were an old F1 cock and several second, third, and fourth gen birds some who were crossed with something else.