Sunday, October 27, 2013

Plans for 2014...

 

Welsh Harlequins
We will again be breeding silver and gold phases in the same breeding pen. We should be able to hatch quite a few hatching eggs in '14, and already have a short waiting list from this year and new people looking to get started in this wonderful breed.

Mallards
We will be breeding Snowy as our main project, as always, but we are also working with blue fawn and gray this year in hopes of breeding some pastels. These aren't really anything we plan to show or reproduce on any large scale, we just have the birds to breed from, and really like the color patterns. Hatching eggs will be available when they begin laying for both Snowy and the Blue Fawn/Gray project.

East Indies
These belong to my wife like the Mallards belong to me. We recently added another breeding pair to our small flock so hopefully we will have better fertility this year and hopefully, fingers crossed, hatch enough of these where we can pick out and replace some of the breeders with better birds. We will not offer any hatching eggs from these but may have young birds available by Fall.

Tufted Romans
We will sell hatching eggs if we have extras. We plan to let one or two of the hens set, if they choose, but we really don't need additional birds, they are guard/show animals mainly but we would like to hatch and additional female to even up our flock.

Pilgrims
We will be offering hatching eggs for these as well, if they go broody we will let them sit as well, but we do not plan to incubate any of their eggs ourselves. The geese tend to hatch best by themselves and we are more than happy to let them since their eggs take up space we could use for ducks in the incubator.


Light Brown Dutch Bantams
These are very special to us, after breeding them years ago, we finally got back into these! We will not offer any hatching eggs but should have a few individuals available late season.

White Silkie/Showgirl Bantams
These will be our son's other project for '14. He managed to get his hen to go broody in August and hatch some babies, well now he's hoping for a repeat and build up his flock. We have whites, and while our Showgirl and Silkie are both pure white, they may throw other colors, but we will offer hatching eggs when available. (We did hatch one blue this year???)

Dun Ameraucana Bantams
These are another one of my projects, they came from the farm up the road where they had decided to no longer breed these so since I am a huge fan of the chocolate color, they had to come down and live with us. We are hoping to secure some nice black females to put in with them in order to breed 50/50 black/duns.


Saturday, October 26, 2013

Blue Trout, Apricot & Brown Trout

 The following information is for genetic research only, these birds are not owned by K&S Waterfowl Farm but by friends and fellow waterfowl breeders. We are no longer breeding Trout patterned birds but love the color pattern and find it very interesting from a breeding starting point.
 
After the previous post, I was doing more research and came across some other interesting birds, all in the same "trout" series, but variations on the same.
 
Blue Trout is the same as regular Trout with the addition of one (heterozygous) Blue gene, making them 'BLUE Trout'

Male: M+M+ lili e+e+ Blbl+ C+C+ B+B+ r+r+ D+D+ Bu+Bu+
Female: M+M+ lili e+e+ Blbl+ C+C+ B+B+ r+r+ D+- Bu+-
 
 
Blue Trout Drake and Blue Trout Hen (background), Trout Hen Foreground. Photo from Geese Wranglers LLC. Thanks Kathy!!! **This was our original source of the Trouts we bred from.**
 
 
Apricot is the same as regular Trout with the addition of two (homozygous) Blue genes, making them 'SPLASH Trout'

Male: M+M+ lili e+e+ BlBl C+C+ B+B+ r+r+ D+D+ Bu+Bu+
Female: M+M+ lili e+e+ BlBl C+C+ B+B+ r+r+ D+- Bu+-
 
 
Photo from Quacky Acres Gamebird Farm
 
 
Then these I ran across just looking for pictures to better explain some things. These birds are owned by Keystone Waterfowl Farm and are Brown Trout. Without seeing them in person I think they are regular Trout with the Brown dilution gene added in making them brown where they would be black. (Like a Gold Welsh Harlequin.)

Male: M+M+ lili e+e+ bl+bl+ C+C+ B+B+ r+r+ dd Bu+Bu
Female: M+M+ lili e+e+ bl+bl+ C+C+ B+B+ r+r+ d- Bu+-

(I think these are the correct genotypes for them.)
 
 
Photo from Keystone Waterfowl Farm

 

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Trout/Harlequin/Snowy Indian Runner Crosses (Breeding Comments Only!)

 
Recently I came across pictures on Facebook of some ducks that a friend of mine acquired for herd dog training. After contacting the friend and a friend of hers I finally ran across these pictures of the friends birds. (Not all pictures are ours, See bottom for proper credit.)
***For Blue Trout, Apricot Trout & Brown Trout see next post.***
FOR GENETIC REFERENCE!!!

 
 
A bunch of young birds showing typical trout or light phase markings with eye stripes. These look a lot like purebred Trout Indian Runners in that awkward teenager stage.
 
 
Two ducklings: these are trout marked ducklings.
 
 
A Momma-duck with her brood. (ducklings L-R: silver/splash, harlequin, trout, harlequin.)


 
A trio of breeder birds. They show a little of both breeds, they are more elongated than a typical Welsh Harlequin and their bills and heads show the Indian Runner influences. The females have very distinct eye stripes which is a fault in Harlequins but is common in Mallard-patterned genetics.
 

 
More birds for type perspective.

 
Ducklings again: Note how three of the ducklings appear to have the nice trout markings found in typical trout ducklings, two are harlequin/snowy because they are yellow with the tan blush over their heads and wings, and the third is probably either light blue snowy (Aleutian) or a splash/silver.
 

The Trout Indian Runners we bred for several years. (No longer breeding Trout) but you can see that the drake and drakes pictured above are very similar, The pictures above are all Welsh Harlequin x Indian Runner crosses, the birds below are pure Trout Indian Runners.
 
The Trout variety is a Light Phase Mallard, meaning the Light Phase is expressed over the top of a normal Gray (Wild Type).
 
Trout Genotype: M+M+ lili e+e+ bl+bl+ C+C+ B+B+ r+r+ D+D+ Bu+Bu+
 
Female Trout Genotype: M+M+ lili e+e+ bl+bl+ C+C+ B+B+ r+r+ D+- Bu+-
              
 
 
Female Welsh Harlequin Genotype: mdmd lihlih e+e+ bl+bl+ C+C+ B+B+ r+r+ D+- Bu+-
 
**note: Gold Welsh Harlequins will both be homozygous for Brown Dilution, so  B+B+   

 
 
Typical Welsh Harlequins
 
 
 
Below are some of our 2012 Welsh Harlequin, Snowy Mallard and Trout Indian Runner ducklings. Note that the Runners already show the longer bill length and stance even a few days old. They show variation from duckling to duckling but each one has the same dark head "Mohawk" and then single brown eye stripes that run "through" the eye, and brown over the back. The Welsh Harlequins and Snowy Mallards have the light brown blush eye stripes and heads but are generally yellow with the color showing on the head.
 

(Welsh Harlequins & Snowy Mallards Left: Trout Indian Runner Ducklings are brown ones on Right.)

For More Information on Trout Indian Runners and Color Breeding please visit the links below, they are all very well put together websites, worth reading.

http://www.ashtonwaterfowl.net/indian_pics.htm

http://www.runnerduck.net/photo_gallery/default.html

http://www.steepleducks.co.uk/ducks.htm

 
 
Photos 1-6 photographed and owned by D. Williams
Photos 7-10 photographed and owned by K&S Waterfowl Farm