LaurenRitz
Crowing
I have all large breed dark and mottled birds. I have deliberately mixed in Jersey Giant, but the first JG roo lost his life defending his girls against a dog. One of his sons is now protecting the flock. It's a good thing that they're fertile early!
Hawks and owls will fly by, look, and try elsewhere. I think that is primarily because of size, but the young birds do look like ravens. The hawks have never taken any of the chicks either. All the girls are large as well, I'm guessing around 7 pounds.
Build now for your future generations. If you want large birds in the future, you probably don't want to introduce small hens. It's not just the rooster that matters in the long term.
I mixed in some quickly maturing breeds to balance the JG slow growth, got some high production layers to balance the lower production of the heritage breeds, and so on.
The first JG x RIR crosses were quick maturing. They took more after the RIR side. Their sister looks pure JG, with the JG slower growth. The dog attack got one of the pullets. The other isn't old enough to lay yet so I don't know if she'll follow the JG pattern of laying at about six months, or the RIR pattern.
In the long term it doesn't really matter, since this is just the first mix. When the JG x RIR cross mixes with the Speckled Sussex, mixes with the Bielefelder x Black Australorp, the Ranger, the Marans, the Buckeye, over generations I should get to my goal. A self-sustaining, large dual purpose breed with excellent foraging skills that thrives in cold and heat and has good predator evasion.
8 week old Bielefelder x Black Australorp
Hawks and owls will fly by, look, and try elsewhere. I think that is primarily because of size, but the young birds do look like ravens. The hawks have never taken any of the chicks either. All the girls are large as well, I'm guessing around 7 pounds.
Build now for your future generations. If you want large birds in the future, you probably don't want to introduce small hens. It's not just the rooster that matters in the long term.
I mixed in some quickly maturing breeds to balance the JG slow growth, got some high production layers to balance the lower production of the heritage breeds, and so on.
The first JG x RIR crosses were quick maturing. They took more after the RIR side. Their sister looks pure JG, with the JG slower growth. The dog attack got one of the pullets. The other isn't old enough to lay yet so I don't know if she'll follow the JG pattern of laying at about six months, or the RIR pattern.
In the long term it doesn't really matter, since this is just the first mix. When the JG x RIR cross mixes with the Speckled Sussex, mixes with the Bielefelder x Black Australorp, the Ranger, the Marans, the Buckeye, over generations I should get to my goal. A self-sustaining, large dual purpose breed with excellent foraging skills that thrives in cold and heat and has good predator evasion.
8 week old Bielefelder x Black Australorp
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