Thứ Hai, 18 tháng 5, 2020

DEEP CUTTING ABILITY

Perhaps the next most important requirement of a short heel cock is that he drive his blows deep. This can be accomplished with a round house swing, but far better is it to have the cock drive them to the socket with a quick snap. You don't have to wind up to drive a 1 1/4 inch heerto the socket. A quick snap by a cock in good balance and with his weight behind his blow witl do the job just as well or better. In addition, the snap of the blow seems to have a paralyzing effect in itself. Furthermore, a bird which snaps single stroke blows is less liable to land off balance where he is unable to protect himself. A bird which snaps his blows, frequently, in fact usually. pulls his own heels without any trace of hanging, no matter where they land or how deep they penetrate. Many times people thinka bird with such a striking style is not cutting at all, particularly if the blows are landing in the body, and can't understand "wot hoppened" when a minute or two later the opponent is unable to leave his score.  
But the blows must be driven deep. no matter how delivered. Shallow cutting is no good, neither is pushing or hooking. We have already seen how shuffling can be a handicap In instead of an asset. Countless times all short heel men have seen a cock which has been on the receiving end of a hundred shallow blows, perhaps he is even blinded and partially coupled, come up with a single pile driving shot which kills
his opponent deader than a maggot. To the unitiated the top bird looked like 100 to 20 to win, but you never see such odds in short heels. If the top bird is striking shallow, and the cut up bird has shown the capacity to drive a deep one, the odds are never greater than 100 to 80 and probably not even that.
Now all this does not mean that fast, relatively shallow cutting, multiple stroke birds cannot win in short heels. In fact there are more ways and styles to win a cock fight than there are to skin a cat. I've seen fowl with the above mentioned style win in short heels, and they looked like a million dollars doing it. Swarmed all over their opponents and never gave them a chance. Made your mouth water to own one. But these were superlative birds in superlative condition and at the peak of the form. Not one cocker in many thousands can ever possess such birds or attain such condition. Countless other families of fowl with similar fighting style, but of lesser ability and only average condition, flood the short heel pits, but normally end up among the also rans. In this discussion of short heel fighting style we must consider primarily the quality of chickens and the quality of condition attainable by the average cocker. It should also be noted that even these outstanding cocks did not win this particular derby. In fact they ended up in a many way (7 or 9, as I recall it) for third position, all of which indicates that even superlative fowl in phenomenal condition cannot completefy make amends for a deficiency in deep cutting when competing in I t/' inch heels.
Many long heel cockers have the impression that body cutting is inef. fective in short heels. This is not true. On the contrary, many short heel cockers who possess fowl which drive their heels deep prefer their birds to strike at the body, particularly at the start of battle. The vital organs in a cock's body lungs, heart, liver, gizzard do not lie so far beneath the surface that they cannot be reached with 1 1/4 inch heels which are  really driven home. A short straight heel usually can be pulled or shuf• fled into that area but it certainty can be driven there by a cock having the proper stroke. Body cutting has the further advantage of substantially reducing the adversary's ability to punish you. "Always direct your first shot to the stomach" the old Western gunfighters used to say, "it spoils the other fellow's aim." It is the same way with hard driven short heels to a cock's body. Not only is mortal damage being done, but the opposing cock's ability to hurt you is being substantially reduced.
Shots to the head or neck, unless they strike a principal nerve or vital organ, do not have this same effect. In fact they frequently cause the  opposing cock to strike more viciously and accurately than before. But hard blows to the ''bread basket" slow him down then and there, and he stays slowed down. Furthermore, there is always the chance that a body blow so delivered will strike a vital organ. There are just as many one shot kills resulting from body blows in IV' heels as there are from shots to the head or neck. So never discount the effectiveness of body cutting in short straight heels if the blows are driven deep as they should be.
Before leaving the subject of deep cutting, mention should be made of the hooking or "pulling in" type of stroke. This technique of stroking is
very deadly in long heels with high points and curved blades, but in short straight heels.such manner of striking is at a great disadvantage. Such heels instead of working in deep merely slide off into thin air or scratch a little bit without doing any mortal damage. In other words, to wind up this particular point, there is no substitute for deep cutting with a hard driven straight blow when competing in 1 1/4 inch regulation F.S 

FIGHTING STYLE

The first prerequisite of a short heel cock is that he must point his heels, that is, he must strike so that the blow lands on the point of the heel rather than on the side or curve of the blade. This statement would appear to be self evident – "elementary, my dear Watson," as Sherlock Holmes would say, but it is astonishing how few cocks possess this capacity. If birds pointed their heels every fly, no battle would last very tong no matter what the length of gaff. Some fowl point their heels well at the beginning of the battle, but can't cut butter when tired or injured. Others are just the opposite. They apparently do but little damage in the opening wild flurries, But when they settle down, even though injured, they cut every fly. Ability or inability to finish a down cock is largely a matter of heel pointing. 


The manner of affixing or setting the heels has something to do with a cock's ability to deliver his blow so that it lands on the point of the blade. Likewise the style of gaff: tow points or high points, the side set wide or slight. Different birds require different settings and different styles of gaffs for best results.


As a general thing, thick full breasted birdsfequire a wider side set than thin breasted slab sided birds. Perhaps an example or two will illustrate the point better than words. A few years ago a friend who had been extremely successful in the long heel major circuits sent me a dozen of his best stags to try in short heels. They were extremely round, full breasted birds. I heeled them the same as I did my own fowl which were on the narrow side, but which cut extremely well when heeled very  sharp, that is, the point being set well ahead of the leader in the cock's leg. My friend's broad breasted birds could not cut anything, and after trying half a dozen I gave up on them. At the end of the season I was cleaning out odds and ends via the pit route, which can be very educational at times, and decided, as an experiment. to try heeling my friend's birds very wide, that is, the the point way back on the hock joint. The result was electrifying. Some of them knocked off two and three opponents without ever leaving the pit.


Another example: A few years ago I added some new blood to my fowl which substantially increased the width and fullness of their breasts. The infusion was a marked success, and the pit record of the cross quite remarkble. But I noticed that if the birds did not kill in the first pitting or two that I had an awful time in the drag pit despite the fact that the opponent was down and out and my cock was stroking hard and deliberately. Finally after dropping two such fights in the drag pit which  took me out of first place in a big derby, I came to my senses: the new cross stroked differently from my old narrow fowl, and required a wider heel setting, especially after they became tired and exhausted.


Conformation alone witl not determine how to set your heels most ef fectively, but if your fowl are not cutting, that is, not striking with the point, try setting the gaffs differently, or experiment with different curve of blade or height of point. Of course if a bird strikes with his hocks or the bottom of his feet, nothing wilt help, but sometimes the manner of setting can make a difference, which cost me a lot of money to learn.


Before leaving the subject of heel pointing, or having the blow land on the point of the gaff, let's make a brief comparison between long and short heels in this respect. Of course striking with the point of the gaff is important no matter what type or length of heel is in use. But with long heels with their high points and curved blades, a cock that wades in and flails away is almost certain to get the point in somewhere, at which time he pulls and shuffles away and the gaff goes in deeper and deeper. But with short straight regulation heels most of this pulling and shuffling does not mean a thing, for the blade instead of going deeper into the opponent's body is, in atl probability, just fanning the air or scratching the feathers.


Several years ago the late Knotty Harris, a well known chicken fighter from Memphis, was attending a short heel tournament in New York state where I was competing. Now, no one ever accused Knotty of being stupid so far as chicken fighting or gambting was concerned. He knew more and saw more than most. But this was his first experience with short heels. Time after time a bird would pull what appeared to Knotty to be a devastating shuffle. whereupon he would burst into full cry with  the odds. Just as quickly they were covered. The last I saw of Knotty he was arranging a loan from Solly O'Connell ' 'to get train fare home.


Knotty's trouble was that he did not realize the tremendous difference in effectiveness between the various blows when delivered in short heels instead of long.


Frank Shy


Chủ Nhật, 5 tháng 4, 2020

'WHAT IS A ROUNDHEAD ? '

H.P. Clarke, G&S Jan. 1942

What is a “round head?” A peacomb fowl not of pure American, English or Irish blood. 
When a strain of Bankiva type, shows a variation in comb, it may come rose, cup or doublecomb but never triple comb without an infusion of the Oriental. This fact is recognized in England by the Oxford Game Club which admits to its exhibitions rose-combs the same as single, but no peacombs.
The pure Aseel was introduced by myself in 1887. Aseel-crosses had been sent over from England and Ireland long before that. So there were a few peacombs, which were almost exclusively in our northern states. Some of these could have been descended from the original Sumatra but the great majority unquestionably Came from Aseel crosses imported from England and Ireland.
I never knew anything about McCoyle or Sa unders. Got acquainted with Allen and Shelton at the New Orleans tournament of 1907. Just a few years later Anthony Greene tried to prove that all these Round Heads came from crosses of his Japs, but not Very convincing. Allen did have some high-stationed dark reds,— think he called them "Knob-bcombs," —which really semeed to be Jap crosses. They were quite different from his Round Heads. A Northern cocker at that tournament when asked if he had ever before seen such birds as the Round Heads replied: "Yes, they are rather plentiful in some sections, only in Our country they are known as Grade Aseels."
Will Allen deserves full credit for popularizing the round head type in the South. Before his time a peacomb was looked upon as almost a disgrace in that Section of the country.

The History Of The Allen Roundhead Gamefowl Chicken Breed

Author: JD McCoy

To simplify the story of the Allen Roundheads for those who haven't heard it before.
Will Allen of Mississippi obtained a Boston Roundhead gamecock from Dr. Fred Saunders and crossed him over some hens that a blend of Redquill and Grist Grady. The Gradys' were originated seemingly as a succession of battle crosses by Col Grist of GA. Some of the breeds making up the Gradys were Claiborne, Shawl neck (Southern USA Whitehackles) and Warhorse, plus a bit of Spanish blue stock.

Since all these breeds are straight comb, it would seem that Boston cock had very strong pea comb genes to give that characteristic to his offspring and descendants for generations to come to this day- after 100 yrs. or so.

I have owned many, many "Roundhead" fowl over the past long yrs. I have been in the sport. I put the name in quotes because it refers (in the USA) to most any pea comb fowl that happens to be black breasted reds with white or yellow legs and that do not show too much of their Oriental lineage.

However there are also Black Roundheads and Negro Roundheads and on and on. So now it is used more as a generic term for pea comb fowl than as the name of a specific breed. However, generally the name refers to the Allen and Shelton Roundheads (Shelton was Allen's brother-in-law and they owned the fowl together). But another" however" the Allen Roundheads were breed and to a great extent developed by another old man-R.E. Walt. In fact in my younger days, most of the Roundhead gamefowl around OK. were referred to as RE Walt Roundheads instead of Allens.

You might ask about the Boston Roundheads that made the Allens. They arrived in the USA from Ireland without an ID tag. According to my sources, these fowl were known to be Irish Whitehackles-bred just like the more common English Whitehackles such as the North Britons, Earl of Derbies, and so on but many of the Irish had pea combs. The original Kearney (and Duryea) Irish Whitehackles had a % of pea combs as well as the Irish Whitehackles bred by my Irish friend John Tynan. I think he called them Queen Anne Whitehackles but I have forgotten for sure.

Remember after England colonized India, the English breeders had access to the best Oriental fowl such as Asil and even Japanese. These Oriental bloodlines were then added to the early English fowl of 500 yrs. or so ago that weighed only around 4 lbs.-about like the small Spanish cocks today. The Oriental crosses increased the size to around 5 lbs. or bigger, which most American cocks are today.

Over the years, the English breeders bred out the pea comb but since it didn't bother the Irish, they continued to breed both straight comb and pea comb Whitehackles. Of course the name Whitehackles comes from the old English custom of trimming the neck hackles close to the skin so that the cocks with a white under feather in the neck would be a whitehackle.

There are also breeds called Blackhackle. There are jillions of Oriental/American crosses that come peacomb and are called Roundheads that contain not a drop of the original Allen bloodline. As is true for all other strains-some Roundheads are awfully good while others are awfully bad but most are somewhat in the middle. The pea comb Kelso fowl owe much of their good qualities to the George Smith Roundhead (same stock as Lundy Roundheads) that was blended with Claret to make the McClanahans that Walter Kelso used in his initial cross."

From:A.J.Jarret
For the original cock of this family I am forever indebted to DR.Fred Saunders of Salem Masacheusetts. I paid him the highest price ever paid for a gamecock in America. I took this cock and bred him a Grist yellow legged Grady hen. I raised 4 stags and 7 pullets.I then bred the old cock back to his daughter each season line breeding him until his offspring were 1/8 to 1/16 Grady and Balance Roundhead. By this method I increased size,station bone and muscle. They nearly all come yellow legged and beaks, roundhead,often with white in their wings.The old cock was a spangle. I then got from a Mr.John M.Vines of Jefferson Texas,a very old cocker,3 hens of his old inbred Cripple Tony family.These hens were dark fowl and legs.I bred the old original Roundhead to these hens. The cross was a hit,and kept breeding the old cock to his daughters each season, breeding to the Roundhead side.This stock often throws a dark pullet or stag,coming of couse from the Cripple Tony blood.This family of Roundheads is one the greatest on earth.They are dodgers and smart cocks, like the pro fighter of today they use their head as well as their feet and they have won more mains and tournaments than any cocks known to the south. No better description can be given of these cocks then that given by the honorable Sol P.McCall of New Orleans and Allison Wells of New Orleans. They come white and yellow legged and run from 4-08 to 6-08.The hens of this family are the smallest of any gamefowl known to me.
Signed: W.L.Allen.
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Thứ Ba, 14 tháng 1, 2020

Whitehackle

http://www.reach-unlimited.com/p/259719619/whitehackle-aggressive-power

Aggressive Power, Handsome Beauty

Bloodline History


Morgan Whitehackle

Col. William Morgan of East Orange, New Jersey bred and fought some of the best Whitehackles as a pure stock gamefowl, which were pure Gilkerson cocks sourced from North Britain.

In 1858, George Gilkerson, an English farmer living in Cortland County, NY, imported some fowl from Cumberland, England from a man named Lawman a relative of Billy Lawman of New York State.  Called North Britain at first and later known as Gilkerson Whitehackles.

The North Britain gamefowl were duckwing red, brown red and pyle.  Before his death, Gilkerson gave many of his fowl to Col. Morgan, among them a little imported Scottish hen, maybe a Lawman, which Gilkerson prized most highly.  Col. Morgan bred this hen with the old Gilkerson fowl and her blood is in all the strains of Whitehackle he created.  The Morgan Whitehackle became more famous than the Gilkerson fowl, winning against Kearney, the Eslins, Mahoney in the Pennsylvania coal mining district.

Morgan only infused two outcrosses into his strain of Whitehackle pure bloods.  Morgan got a ginger hen from Perry Baldwin, and put her in the yard of Sonny Stone of Newark.  Stone bred her, her grand-daughters and great grand-daughters with the Morgan cocks. 

The Whitehackles resulting from the mix, had the bloody heel and fighting ability of the pure Morgan's as well as the aggressiveness of the ginger [newbold fowl].  Morgan then took a fifteen-sixteenth Morgan and a sixteenth (Ginger) newbold hen from Stone, and bred her on his own gamefarm.  John Hoy of Albany purchased gamefowl from Billy Lawman, and he and Morgan exchanged broodcocks freely, so the Whitehackle was continued as a pure strain.

Morgan bred the Lawman Whitehackle, reduced to one quarter in his own farm.  In the early nineties Morgan gave a small pen of his fowl to a Colonel in Virginia.  The colonel inbred the fowl and when he died, the Whitehackles became the roosters of a professor at Georgetown university, who knew nothing about breeding or cock fighting, but he kept the stock pure.  Neither the pure Morgan Whithackle or inbred birds have changed in twenty-five years.



Murphy Gamefowl as Whitehackle

Mr. Murphy was a very private cocker who considered his affairs his own business and saw no reason to discuss them with anyone.  The gamefowl he bred showed the most consistently uniform fowl ever seen in New York main cocking events.  He lost his fair share, but he won a majority of the mains he competed in, winning forty-nine stag mains according to a cocker who followed his gamefowl career.

Mr. Murphy was part owner of Schley and company, a large brokerage firm.  Born in Long Island, New York, he began working around the harness horse track near his home by the time he was 14.   He became a close colleague of the horse racers, who were active traders in the NY stock market, and they gave Mr. Murphy tips on investing in the market, where he made good money.  Many of the Horsemen at that time were crazy about cockfighting.  Murphy was attracted by the winnings of the sport and cocking was already in full swing around New York City.

At one time three or four horses owners he jockeyed for in Syracuse, New York, had a current account of $100,000 in the bank, from which Murphy could withdraw any time if he saw a good horse that could breed well with his horse patrons.  Mr. Murphy could have gotten any proven bloodline he desired to start his gamefarm but his independent nature led him to raise his own bloodline and he didn't want anyone to know what they were, or where they came from.   No one ever knew how he started his bloodlines and he just purchased whatever fowl he wished to start breeding cocks.

Nick Downes, an old Irish man who worked for him for 30 years, claimed Murphy fowl were Lawman Whitehackles. John Hoy, a great cocker around 1900 until his death in 1929, work for Murphy for seven years as a feeder and, Hoy was associated with Billy lawman and had the Lawman Whitehackles and Muffs. He took some of the fowl to Murphies place and a great many of the a more breed, raised and fought by and for Murphy. And, after hoy left Murphy, some of the fowl remained. They were the fowl Murphy continued to raise and fight.

The Murphy fowl were very uniform in every way, looks, fighting style and gameness. They were sort of a rusty red with white in wings and tail, call straight comb and all yellow legs and beaks.


Kearney Whitehackle

Bloodline History

The Kearny Whitehackle was developed by Floyd Gurley who bred them for over 50 years from the original strain of Michael Kearney sold down through the generations.  Floyd developed the winning Green Legged Kearny Whitehackles (Chesapeak) and the equally proven Yellow Legged Kearny Whitehackles. The last strain that Floyd Gurley developed was the Spangled Kearny Whitehackles.

Another modern breeder who developed this bloodline is Steve Sturm.

The Kearny Whitehackle is 100% straight comb. Whitehackle cocks come as yellow-legged, or green-legged (Chesapeak) and also spangled.  The Whitehackle is still considered as the most beautiful gamecock, the breed most recognized as top dog Whitehackle was the strain developed by Mr. Michael Kearney in 1871.

Breeders who Swear by the Whitehackle

Jesse Horta, a very smart gamefowl breeder, said that in order to win in today's competition, you should have bloodlines that can kill Sweaters.  The current reigning champion of the pit throughout the Philippines is the Sweater, its swarming attack always overwhelming all comers after the last infusion by Carol Nesmith enabled a bird that once lost steam in a long fight due to its relentless attacks to sustain a fight until its opponent gave up the ghost.  Because of this, almost all cockers in the country have Sweaters as part of their broodstock.  Jesse

To make his Sweater Killers ( Jesse christened them as his White-Legged Sweater ), he  crossed a Kearny Whitehackle and Junior Belt's Cowan Roundhead together at a 3/4 Kearny Whitehackle x 1/4 Cowan Roundhead ratio.

Curt Langston, another cocker who was lucky to get original stock from Floyd Gurley himself in the 90s, before the old man retired.  Both exchanged ideas on how to cross and raise the Whitehackle for better fighters.  Mr. Langston chose to breed with Oriental fowl, and the outcome helped him win 13 straight fights in long knife in his outing with the Whitehackle hybrid crosses years ago and recently he won 4-cock derby using the same Kearney Whitehackle cross.

Most other Gamefarms in the Philippines that had the precious opportunity to acquire Floyd Gurley bred Kearney Whitehackles to cross with their own broodstocks, like RED GAMEFARM have had very good fight records against othewr local top cockers.

The Kearney Whitehackle is always bred as pure stock and are often crossed with the Sweaters and Roundheads for a modern pit fighter that can go head to head with any rooster.


Fighting Style

The Whitehackle gamefowl are straight combed with red eyes and are medium stationed. While 90% are yellow red in color, the remaining 10% are spangled, mustard colored hackles. These fighters are built with broad shoulders, fairly compact and with heavy plumage, each rooster having an average weight of 2 to 2.4 kgs.  The Whitehackle is a very deadly cutter, break high and can fight in any position available due to their agility and shiftiness, on the ground and in the air.  They are strong and power hitting fighting fowl with very deep game.  Described by veteran gamefowl aficionados as a ring general, the Whitehackle fights best using the long knife slasher type.  This beautiful rooster is a very smart fighter and has accurate timing that places deliberate blows to kill its opponent.  It is also a very aggressive rooster.  Because this strain has been carefully sustained by smart breeding over the years, it is still a consistent and proven bloodline that wins big. 

Floyd Gurley bred the modern version of the bird straight pure blooded stock to create a unifrom bloodline that consistently tops its opponents in the pit until today.

Thứ Hai, 13 tháng 1, 2020

asil

Asil History
"Asil" is an Arabic word meaning "pure" or "thoroughbred, and is also spelled 'Aseel'. It is a very old game breed from the INDIA/PAKISTAN area and has been bred there as a game bird for many centuries, specifically for its aggressive behaviour. The Asil gamefowl breed might well be 3,500 years old as cockfighting has been mentioned in the Indian law, religion and philosophy manuscript "Manusriti" of that date; and in one of India's oldest manuscripts the "Dharmastrastra Manu, a classic work on law, order and ethics dating back to 1,500 B.C the first remarks about them were recorded. The breed was popular with the rulers of India (Mughal emperors & some Nawabs of states in India). They established the Asil for gaming and also developed their beauty. It is recognised as the oldest established breed of gamefowl, and this family of birds is a large one with many regional variations in size and type. Asil were developed primarily as a fighting bird, and this aspect of their development has had an overpowering influence on the breed's structure, constitution, and temperament as well as influencing its role in the development of more modern breeds. They are also known for their intelligent defensive and tactical thinking to keep power for long times in a endurance fight. The oldest evidence of organized cockfighting (based on archeological finds) has been found in the Indus valley (today Pakistan but Indian territory till 1947). The breed is difficult to keep due to these aggressive tendencies.


SAAB VIPER ASIL
This is how the Saab Viper Aseels were bred as from Mr. Nasser Saab that he sent to me back in 2008...

Saab Viper Asil Breeding History
Hello again Chris, ok in 1994 I bred a very game tested cock to a very game tested hen, both had very similar qualities but I liked the cock more. This bird had all the points I was looking for in an aseel. You see it is all about the breeder's personal preference. This cock had square shanks, very tight feathers, etc... These are qualities I liked. This first breeding produce seven chicks (F1’s) and they all came very similar to the father, after the chicks matured I tested the pullets and the stags then kept one pullet (F1) that had everything I was looking for in a brood hen. She was very game, aggressive, thick beak and black spurs and also after testing the stags (F1) I kept the best one that looked just like the father. I never since then used the original hen. I took the daughter (F1) and bred back to her father and then out that breeding I kept the best hen (F2) and then used the stag (F1) that I had saved from the original breeding and bred to the hen (F2) I saved from the second breeding and so on. I hope this helps if you need more info Please let me know. Happy New Year.

Hello Chris, happy new year to you and yours also.
Out of the off spring of pullet (F2) and stag (F1) I saved some of the best pullets (F3) and bred back to the original cock and saved one stag (F4) and bred back to pullet (F1). From that point I felt that I made a family with basically the male line and female line and started breeding cousins (F5) and every now and then I would take one of the of springs and go back to original cock or to pullet (F1). I never bred brother to sister.

Best regards,

Nasser



story of vizzards
pareng rod,you`ll love reading this story.


ORIENTALS

I probably have had more first hand experience, or a least observtion, of Oriental grades than anyone now living. I am forty five - forty six next February - and my first recollection of anything wearing feathers, started with Aseel grades and pure Aseels or McCoy Jungle as they were then called, at the time the Graves Aseel (Atkinson blood), Rossiter Aseel and a couple of other families were in existence. There were bitter argument between oriental fanciers as to the relative merits and gameness of the Akinson or Graves Aseel, the McCoy Jungle, the Shamo (large) Jap, the Tuzo (small) Jap. My father have scant patience with theoretical arguments, and bought out about every Aseel or Jap man of his day, or at least procure some of the blood, graded it on various American families in halves, quarters, eights, and three eights and through the years he and I fought hundreds of pure and graded orientals in our back yard in 1 1/4 peg awls. He also corresponded with or was visited by most of the oriental fanciers of his day, such as Anthony Greene, etc. After a few years Dad said that all the birds of moderate size were Aseels, and the distinction between Aseels, Japs, and Jungle disappeared. We found that there were good and bad families of Oriental fowl, and aside from great power and toughness, more mediocre ones than otherwise. Anyone who says there are no game Aseels, however, just hastn't seen enough grades to know all the answers. We found that all of the McCoy Aseels were game in the sense of taking their death and claiming viciously while being punished. But McCoy receive three importations and they were not as uniform as Whitehackles and Warhorses -- All were Aseels after first importation of bantam "Jungle Fowl" but different types. Some threw grades that would break a cock to pieces with a couple of licks, and then loaf and fall to finish and be counted out in the old California rules under which opposing pitters counted on the other cock. By selection from about three individuals my father was able to carry a line of Aseels from which pure ones will hammer a dead cock as long a he is left lying. Even theses may occassionally throw poor finishers, but I have seen a lot of modern pit cocks that were not too hot on a down cock.

Incidentally Anthony Greene told Dad in my presence that his best grades came from a medium sized black hen that was almost identical with our "Blackie" aseel hen at whom they were looking at the time. He got her from a Jap skipper who came up on ship to Sacramento - so called them Japs. His best grades were a mixture of this hen with Shawl and Muholland Grey. By coincidence the Aseel Grades bred by us as a family, and now linebred for over thirty two years, was a blend of Aseel-Shawl-and Mahoney Commodore and Gull, which apparently would be very similar to the Muholland Greys.

At that time the Blackie Jungle or Aseel fowl had become well known in the Pacific Northwest in the hands of Jule Snider to whom Dad gave some. They were smaller and finer than most Aseels as they were 7/8 and 15/16 of the old Blackie hen. The pure ones could move as well as the average peg awl cocks of that day. Snider graded them on his Bacon Warhorse, but his best grades were Aseel and Mahoney graded on Warhorse. Meanwhile Nicholsen Grim, Fullerton and Leonard were raising the Jungle-Shawl that became famous in the Orland tournaments. They were out of medium sized Grey McCoy Aseels (The Hagenback and three-hundred Rupee cocks) that a local man procured from my father and sent to Grim to breed.

At that time Nicholsen was sending a lot of Jap-Clairbornes from the Northwest. They varied in gameness and ability. The early ones appeared dead game and were hard to whip. The later ones were not always so game but still hard to whip. This opinion is based only on fowl sent to this part of the state, and some were bred here by customers of Nicholsen.

Meanwhile Ed Williams of this vicinity (he died 30 odd years ago) was winning main after main against Whitehackle fowl used by San Francisco parties. They fought in 1 1/4 heels for stakes that were mighty big for those days and for our locality. he used a lot of Jap-Shawls, from medium sized red oriental fowl. He actually used more of my father's grades from the McCoy Aseel, but to the crowd they were Ed's Japs, as they looked a lot alike, expcept for color, as his were bright reds, ours mostly Greys. Fowl almost identical with these Ed Williams Japs (and I believe from the same source) have been used with tremendous success by a lad north of here for several years. He has whipped plenty of so-called major circuit fowl and has whipped me in a little main last season. All the ones I have seen have acted mighty game but I have met only his peak cocks at the peak of the season.

A lot of self-appointed experts claim that Aseel-grades cannot be inbred or linebred. I know of several families that carry 1/8 and 3/16 Aseel that have been carried along for better than 20 years and seem to hold up. Of course any cross presents a problem for inbreeding, and an oriental cross presents a more radical problem than the average cross. Actually the successfully inbred oriental blends go strongly to the American side and while tough and strong, do not seem to preserve the animal-like power of the winning oriental grades. Our Greys, tho 3/16 Aseel, can be crossed directly over straight Aseels, and throw finer and better plumaged birds than many Aseel crosses over reputedly straight American fowl that have not been deeply inbred.

Our experience was that the best average result was a 1/4 blood secured from breeding Aseel cock over the American hen. And then breed the half blood daughters to an American cock of some different American family. The best American fowl for grades seem to be families that hit straight and spar rather than the rolling shuffling type. Using Aseel over Gilkerson Whitehackle and going back on Shawl or vice-versa often gives good results. But successful grading is more a matter of individuals than families. For example one starting with good game aseel blood - slow but not biters, and say an inbred family of Shawl, Calirborne, Mahoney etc., will find that the majority of his crosses will be tough game cocks that are hard game in brush hacks but not necessarily big league fowl. And in each mating the level of ability will tend to be uniform. Then some certain hen or cock of either side, or a certain hen and cock in each side will nick. Such a nick will probably throw consistently high quality in cocks, and when you get such a blend you seldom improve on the half-bloods by cutting down to quarters. But a full brother to the father and full sister to the mother my produce only fair, or even mediocre cocks.

In my opinion the beginner who must keep his fowl in small quarters and who will take the edge off nervous fowl by awkward handling, etc., and who fights in average company, will do better with Aseel grades that with many other type of fowl. He probably would not stay with any family for any length of time anyhow. In fact very few men do. Start them with good fowl and they try to gild the rose by crossing, and end up nowhere. If a man gets some good Aseel, he should get several kinds of American fowl and try several crosses by fighting the stags and eating all pullets. When and if he gets a good nick he sould try to get more of the same American blood, discard the other American hens, and ascertain if he has found some American family that blends well with oriental. Over the years I have seen few disappointments in using Gilkerson and Morgan Whitehackleson Aseel and have seen few succeed too well Sids, Gordons, Mugs or Warhorse over Aseel. Starting with good families ou have a pretty good chance to get superior Hatch-Clarets or Claret-Roundheads for example but good Aseel-Shawls or Aseel-Whitehackles depend on trial and error with individual brood stock. And when one hits on a good mating, stick with it, and experiment just a little in hopes of hitting another one. Thus the Aseel man has about as good a chance to get average fair fowl, as the miscellaneous crosser who comprises about 90 percent of the fraternity.

Furthermore, Aseel grades will probably do better in a hot climate rather than a cold climate. We stayed with them because a shot of oriental means strong thrifty chicks, and fowl that don't wilt when it begins to warm up to a hundred plus in March and April. My father probably fought more oriental grades and blends and with greater success than any other man in the history of cocking, but his ideal fowl were Morgan Whitehackles. He loved them but the chicks just wilted away in our desert heat. He always maintained that if he had continued to live east of the Rockies that he would have used one of the old eastern families. Eventually he ended up with own family, built on eastern peg awl blood with enough oriental to withstand the heat and give some additional power, plus a dash of Shawl when he had to speed them up for long heel competition some thirty years ago. He had a sixth sense in selecting brood fowl so perhaps his case is the exception. The point I wish to make however, is that the man who will cross fowl from year to year anyhow, and fights for a few dollars in average company, can probably do as well and often better, with oriental grades than with big name fowl that he can't walk, condition, or pit like their owners do.

Hoping this may give a space filler in the future, but will be just as happy if it his the waste basket.

----JIM VIZZARD
Cocker's Gazette, issue no. 44, 1988

Thứ Sáu, 10 tháng 1, 2020

BREEDING THE GAMECOCK BY HARRY PARR

A DISCUSSION OF BREEDING METHODS  IN PLAIN LANGUAGE

FORWARD
In 1962 Harry Parr answered the long standing chal lenge of Curtis Blackwell to fight a main. It was billed as the main of the decade and fought in St. Augustine, Florida prior to the tournament. Harry was described in one of the publications as l a serious breeder from Maryl and". When he upset the odds with a 7-3 win people real ized just how serious he was.
Harry has been a member of the Claymore Club since 1957. This group holds a short heel stag tournament each spring. In 1966 Harry retired the prestigious chal lenge  cup by wi nning it for the third time.
The Barnes Cup was inaugurated in 1979. This is the largest cock tournament in the country today and is open to the first twelve forfeits. It regularly attracts entries from eight or more different states and is fought in memory of J. Norris Barnes Or. The trophy was donated by his family. Harry has fought in that event since it's inception and retired a cup by winning it for the third time in 1983.
The reason I mention the foregoing is to demonstrate that Harry has not just come from nowhere to write his thoughts on breeding. He breeds what he fights and he has been successful at it over a period of time, His methods are proven.  
This work is written in plain language by someone who knows the subject. It is something that has been needed for a long time. When Harry saw that his friend Hugh Norman, was not going to be able to produce it, he went. ahead to fill the need. If a breeder cannot get something out of this book, and indeed keep it for reference, I will be surprised.
PREFACE
This paper is being prepared in the hope that it will be useful to the breeder of game fowl who is not familiar with the subject of breeding. In no way should it be considered a treatise on the subject and may in fact be technically in error in some instances. This is because I have omitted all of the terms used in genetics and sometimes plain language is an insufficient substitute. It may be likened to translating a book from one language to another. I have undertaken this project at the urging of friends who insist it, is needed. I am sure there are many others more qulified to deal with the subject, but so far they have not come forward. If certain people is interests are provoked to research this subject in more depth i will be pleased, for there is much more out there and still much to be learned. However, is sufficient in answering some questions and provides some focus for the practical breeder, I will also be pleased.
INTRODUCTION
Over the years in discussions with people on the subject of breeding, I have been impressed that so few possess the knowledge of even the basic principles. It dawned on me that the probable reason was the lack of material that could be readi ly understood by the layman, Most books on the subject immedi ately confront the reader with words such as "heterozygous" and the like. It is not long before the person seeking practical breeding knowledge rather than a degree in genetics gives up in frustration. With this in mind,  attempt to provide a base of information on which to build a breeding practice.
Webster's New World Dictionary defines a gamecock  as 'E a specially bred rooster trained for cock fighting" When a chick is hatched it possesses an of the characteristics it will ever have. No amount of training can alter them. Certainly, man can make them scary and wild. He can turn some into man fighters. He can even teach them tricks, but he cahlt train them how to fight. The fighting characteristics are all inherited. At 'this point it might be well to say there are no breeding formulas for success. No pre-conceived steps that will ultimately produce superior individuals. It is fun to speculate and draw up a plan from which you anticipate producing the perfect fighting cocks; however, one must always guard against falling into a trap. Each mating must be evaluated before going on with your plan. As an example, I got a trio of Blue fowl which were supposedly wonderful cutters. They were very well made with beautiful plumage. I had a family of Clarets which were likewise well made, smart fighters and superior cutters, but when I got them they were small and highly inbred, (more on this subject later). Now, I thought if I breed these two together, through the larger blues and hybrid I will get nice sized pullets with bloodlines that can fight and cut. Then I will put a Hatch cock over them and not only get cocks that can fight and cut,  but will have power and bottom, Logical? Why not? So, I went ahead with my plan and the results were a disaster. 
The stags couldn't cut their way out of a paper bag. They were uniformally terrible. Where had I gone wrong? I went back and fought some offspring of the Blue-Claret cross and they couldn't cut at all. If I had done this before going on with the third step in my plan, the Hatch mating, I would have saved a lot of time, expense,  and disappointment. So while the plan for the ultimate   is important, it is equally as important to  evaluate each mating to make sure you are on the right track, My theory was sound and has worked well past with different families. As I say there is no blueprint to success.
Recently a friend of mines who is a cattle broker, came to my place with the owner of a large herd of Holstein cattle. My friend has been in the cattle business all his life, as was his father. He probably knows the whereabouts of every top dairy cow and bull in the country, not to mention every top herd whether it be Holstein, Guernsey, Jersey or whatever. He ought to. 
It is his business, and he is very good at it. He will put together a herd for you, help you upgrade your present one, advise you in general, or get top dollar for your herd if you wish to di spose of it. Yet he brought this man to my place and asked me to discuss breeding plans with him. Now there are Certain truisms with breeding that apply to chickens, sheep, cattle, etc., but what I know about breeding cattle you could put into a thimble. Although we had a nice visit, I am sure the Holstein man didn't come out with much. The point is there is just no formula for reaching your desired goals.
Breeding game fowl may be the most challenging of  all breeding endeavors. After all we are trying to breed a complete athlete. A fighting cock must be a) quick b) smart c) durable d) game and possess e) cutting ability f) good conformation g) sound plumage h) power i) good eyesight. All of these qualities are, of course, comparative. Some people believe a good cock will win in any length heel or even knife, a belief I cannot subscribe to. The priorities of this list of talent should be dictated by the type heel with which you want  to specialize. Therefore we get down to the type fowl you want to select to begin with and how to go from  there.
Everyone is familiar with the terms a) cross bred fowl b) strains c) pure bred families d) battle cocks. To be Sure the reader is with me when these terms I':are  I would like to set forth my definition of each.
a. Cross Bred Fowl. Chickens produced by breeders  which are constantly changing with the introduction of  new blood. This is by far the most popular method used to produce game fowl. I liken it to a chef creating a new dish. It goes something like this. Mr. Cross Bred Breeder has just cleaned house for whatever reason (chickens started to quit, dogs killed most of the brood yard, etc.). He keeps one old Whitehackle hen, and has some stags out on walks. Mr. C.B. B. has been reading in the journals that a certain breeder has been doing well with his Atomic Greys. This breeder also has an ad stating he will part with a few Trios for X number of dollars. if you can't quite afford these super chickens, he al so has half dozen other breeds for sale. Mr. C.B. B. decides to shoot the whole nickel and is soon in possession of a trio of Atomic Greys. Now keep in mind the Atomic Greys are themselves crosses, being the unlikely mating of an ace brown red cock purchased at a brush fight, over Some fairly closely bred grey hens. The cock of the trio is a four year old winner of five fights. The hens being out of the same mating are sisters to the cock. Mr. C.B. B. breeds this trio and also breeds the Whitehackle hen he kept. One of the stags he had on a walk (now a cock) was a flashy winner of three fights, so he breeds him to the pul lets produced from his Atomic Grey Trio. The old Whitehackle hen, which has since died produced six pretty good stags. He is sentimental about the old hen and wanting to keep the blood, he breeds the best one, which is now a cock, and of course half Atomic Grey, to the produce of the three time winner stag he had kept and the pullets from the Atomic Grey Trio. Along the way he has bought out of the pit a cock which won a long uphill battle. The owner said he was a pure Allen Roundhead. Mr. C. B. B. thinks he could use a little more bottom, so he breeds him to some pullets and hens of hi s various matings to see which works out the best. And so it goes, year after year adding this, trying that, in a rather hap-hazard manner.
The problem with this kind of breeding is lack of consistency. Occasionally, you may find a  breeding together of a cock and hen(s) which produces superior fowl. When one or the other dies, though, the offspring will not carry on.
Cross-bred fowl are hybrids, and hybrids cannot be bred together with any expectations of consistency. I liken it to a kaleidoscope. When you turn a kaleidoscope you get a different pattern every time. When you breed hybrid to hybrid, the genes mix in a different combination, so that you get aces, duds, and everything in between.
b. Strains The name given to fowl by the person or persons who developed and fought them. Usually produced by the breeding of two or more families which are then inbred enough to set uniformity, not uncommonly containing new blood of similar type fowl from time to time.
I think a good example would be what are widely known today as Kelso's. These were originated in Texas by Walter Kelso from largely Madigin type fowl, and fought by him under the banner of Oleander Club. While not  sensational, they more than held their own over a period of years, and were quite uniform in both appearance and  fighting style.
Another good example would be the late Tom Murphy who bred his strain on a large estate in New York. Over the years Mr. Murphy compiled a respectable record in the toughest pits in the Northeast fighting in inch-and-a-quarter heels. Most of the fighting then was mains and tournaments. In the late thirties he and Mr. Hatch branched out to fight in the long heel tournments in  Florida. His cocks too were uniform in looks and style in the case of the latter, he began exchanging fowl with Mr. Kelso, in an effort to add some speed. Mr. Murphy was extremely secretive about his breeding, and I doubt that anyone but he really knew what they were. He was not above asking for, and generally getting a cock he liked, but aside from Frank Shy, and later Walter very few people got any of his fowl. When questioned about the breeding, Mr. Murphy would maintain his chickens were just the same as always. They certainly always looked the same, because he would not fight a cock as his, unless it was a black breasted red with a single comb and yellow legs. In part, this was accomplished by him roaming his estate and disposing of any exceptions with a 22 rifle. The thinking here is  that over the years many crosses wre tried and those which showed to advantage were kept and those that didn't were destroyed. Also, the tried and true family was probably kept pure so as to have something to fall back on if trouble cropped up.
c . Pure Bred Families. A family of fowl, usually the refinement of a strain, which has been in-bred by an individual long enough so that they are reproducing uniformly in all characteristics. A friend of mine, now deceased, for years family of Whitehackles. They all came stright combed, spangled, yellow and white legged. They were all well built and typically ranged in weight from 4:06 to 5:06. Having been bred for inch and a quarter heel- fighting, were heads up, single stroke cocks and very good cutters. Although they were extremely game, they did lack power and constitiution, and could not win a majority in first class competition. He kept them pure however, until the day he died, and used them to cross with other fowl in order to produce battle cocks. The lesson here is he knew what he had and he kept it. He was in a positon then to concentrate his efforts in the direction of trying to fortify their weak points.
d. Battle fowl, Battle cocks. Fowl produced by crossing pure bred families for the purpose of producing cocks for the pit. I suppose the most famous examples were bred by Mr. E.W. Law and Mr. C.C. Cooke being the Law Greys (Claret cock over Regul ar Grey hens ), Clippers (Albany cock over Claret hens), and Hatch Clarets (Hatch cock over Claret hens). The cross can be taken further by breeding to a third family, and another step further by taking that offspring and going back- to one of the  original three families. Anything over that will put us in the category of Cross Bred Fowl and will result in the loss of consistency.
PART 1 
INBREEDING 
 Some people have an incredible horror of  inbreeding and I admit that if one does not have a purpose in mind and exercise sound judgement it is a practice to be avoided. Inbreeding of animals by an individual, makes that individual responsible for what mature would take care of almost flawlessly. Chickens in the wild, indeed the foundation of of todays game fowl were inbred naturally. The theme of course was survival of the fittest. A cock crows to stake out his territory, the same as a dog urinates on plants to make claim to its territory. In the wild, a cock within ear shot of another cock's crow, would not invade that territory unless he wanted to challenge for its ownership. To  re-create a scenario that happened thousands of times  centuries ago, let' s say we put a two year old cock and six two year old hens in the wild with woods, fields arid streams affording shelter, grain, fruit, insects, Seeds etc. The first year each hen raises with one brooding, three stags and three pullets (remember this -is ih' the  In the Fall of the year we now have eighteen stags and eighteen pullets. As the stags come to  themselves a pecking order will be established under the cock, then the more mature stags will move off with the instinct to establish a territory of their own. Some pullets will go with them, but not many, because at this time of the year, although the stags are becoming sexually active, the pullets want no part of it, and will tend to stay with the cock and hens. Let us assume six of the stags are successful in going off to find their own territory and each has lured two pullets to accompany him. Let us also assume that six pullets have survived and have stayed with 'the cock and hens. Now, come Spring, we have two breeding situations. Cock will mate with the original hens and al so his daughters. 2) The stags will mate with their sisters. If the same secenario is repeated through the following year, we have 1) the old cock mating with a) original  b) daughters c) grand-daughters 2) the stags mating with a) sisters b) pullets out of sisters. Come the original cock is now four years old and showing some age. He is successful though,  off all of the stags. However, when Spring arrives he is met with a challenge. A strapping two year old cock has survived somewhere out there by himself. He is the produce of one of the first of the six stags and one of his daughters (keep in mind that her mother was the stag's sister) Although he can hear the old cock crow, he is determined to go in and challenge for the territory. The old cock puts up a desperate fight, but is no match for the two year old who now inherits his harem. What will he breed to this Spring?  surviving original hens (his grandmother or her sisters) 2) sisters to his sire 3) hens out of them by his grand sire 4) pullets produced by #3 hens also by his grand
As previously stated the key to this natural breeding is survival of the fittest. Only the smartest, stTongest and most aggressive fowl lived for long in this most competitve environment, If a mating produced anything less, they were quickly eliminated.  
Following this process, ultimately a less related cock or some adventurous pullet would come into the picture, but this new blood would soon be watered down in this breeding process or completely eliminated if the progency were not competitive.  
Hopefully this illustration will demonstrate the fact that inbreeding is a perfectly natural practice and allow some critics to open there minds to its Use. 
First let us examine what inbreeding does and why it establishes uniformity. The dictionary defines  inbreeding as "to breed by continual mating of individuals of the same or closly related stocks". It  defines inbred as "1) innate or deeply instilled 2) bred  from closly rel ated parents; resulting from bheeding U.  The dictionary defines gene as". any of the units occur ing at specific points on the chromosomes by which heredity characters are transmitted and determined: To over-simplify when we inbreed we cut down on the number  of genes available to produce inherited characteristics.  The more we inbreed, the more we intensify and therefore limit the chances for variance.
There are mahy protests regarding inbreeding and  through the years I think I have heard most of them. Let us examine some of the more popular ones to see if  inbreeding was really to blame. "Inbreeding causes high strung, nervous. even crazy individuals." If you have an individual which tends to be comparatively nervous and high strung and you inbreed to that individual, you will produce more highly nervous and high strung individuals. The fault is not inbreeding perse, it is the breeder. This is a common complaint heard in the world of pure bred dogs. Again it is not inbreeding that is the culprit, it is the breeder. It can happen something like this. Breeder A has become enamoured with showing Cocker Spaniels, and for the first time has made champion with one of his homebreds. The dog is a nervous, high strung individual, and always has been, but with the aid of a little tranquilizer he acts fine in the ring. Breeder A is very proud of his dog and he sees the oppurtunity of sel ting some puppies. Someone has told him he ought to "keep that line" so he breeds his champion to his half sister. By the time the  registration papers get to the new owners of five Cocker Spaniel puppies, the puppies have already established themselves as crazies. They are not very happy with their new aquisitions, but when they at the papers they think they know the answer why. Inbreeding! Certainly they were right, but it was the fault of the breeder, not inbreeding.
How many times have we heard that a strain,  more significantly a family of a strain, has been inbred for years and has retained good qualities, but are now coming small and delicate. I believe there is a logical answer. When selecting individuals to breed most people gravitate to "breedy" or "refined" or "neat” looking specimens. These tend to be on the small side. If one continues to select on this basis, he will set the “breedy” looking type characteristic, and at the same time the reduction of size. Once that is establfished; it is next to impossible to get the size back up again. The way to avoid this pit-fall is to be ever-mindful of it and keep some large, robust individuals in the breeding program.  
As an example, Suppose you rai se an execptional suppose you raised an expectional individual from your inbred family – one  that embodies all the good things you perceive in this family. You want to perpetuate this individual, so you detide to  line breed. Let’s say this is a three year old Cock, and on the smal side. All things being equal, you should select one of his largest sisters for first mating. One of his largest daughters would be bred back to him for the next. One of his largest daughters out of that mating would be used for the next, -etc. 
So that I am not misunderstood as the world size, I do not mean to deliberately keep Coarse, turkey-Iike individuals. Some breeders say they 100k for good bone in a specimen. I am really not quite sure what they mean. The skeletal structure of a Clydesdale horse is great for pulling beer trucks around, but a thoroughbred needs to have light, porous, strong bones to a be a good race horse. I think: the same thing applies to a gamecock.

PART TWO
Gregor Johann Mendel was an Austrian monk and botanist. He lived in the 1800’s and is accepted as the founder of genetics. It is said his interest was first aroused when he crossed dwarf, peas with tall peas expecting to get medium size peas. When instead, he got short, tall and everything in between, he began to investigate.
Webster' s New World Dictionary defines Mendels laws as "the four principles of hereditary phenomena discovered and formulated by Gregor Mendel 1) The laws of independent unit characters, which states that characters such as height, color etc. are inherited separately as units 2) The law of segregation which states that body cells and primordial germ cells contain pairs of such unit characters, and that when gamets are produced, each gamete receives only one member of each such pair 3) The law of dominance, which states that in every individual there is a pair of determining factors (see gene) for each unit character, one from each parent; if these factors are different (heterozygous) the one character (the dominant), appears organism, the other (the recessive) being latent; the recessive character can appear in the organism only when the dominant is absent. Hence in all cross bred generations, unit charaters are shown in varying  combinations, each appearing in a definite proportion of the total number of offspring. 4) the law of independent assortment, which states that any one pair of characters is inherited independently, notwithstanding the simultaneous transmittion of other traits; this principal has been modified by the discovery linkage and pleiotrophy. 
In the breeding of fowl, there are some truisms, which in and of themselves might not seem significance, but which nonetheless can be helpful. They are based on Mendel’s law, inheritance of dominant and recesscive genes. Fowl that are pure in a given dominant characteristic when bred toghether will always reproduce in kind that dominant characteristic. For instance pea comb is dominant over single comb. Therefore if you have a “roundhead” family that is pure for the pea comb characteristic, that family when bred toghether will always produce pea comb offspring.
White leg is dominant over yellow and dark leg (slate or green). It follow that if you have white legged offspring it is obvious that the cocks or hens or legged fowl that are pure (dominant) for this characteristic when bred toghether they will always produce white legged offspring. Grey colored feathering is dominant over red and white. Red is dominant over white with the exception of white leghores however I dout the reader will find this exceptionpractical use. So we see that fowl which are pure for an inheritable characteristic when bred toghether will always produce this same characteristic. This holds true for pure bred as well as cross bred fowl. 
Now that not mean that if we breed together two white legged individuals, that all of their offspring will come white legged, because if one possesses the recessive gene for yellow some will come yellow legged. If we breed two rounhead and one (or both) have in them the recessive gene for straitght comb, we can expect some to come straitght comb.
Now, let us look at what happens when we breed fowl with recessive characteristics. Chickens possessing the same to breed it. On the other hand I have made no attempt to does perpetuate the white color or to eliminate it. If, when individuals, that all of their offspring breeding two red fowl of this family together, for possess the recessive white gene I am apt to get a white yellow some -will come yellow legged. If we breed two one. Years ago Hugh Norman showed me some white fowl which had been produced in this manner, and which he had intentionally bred together (white to white) so that he had a family all coming white. He said he did it because at the time he had a lot of customers requesting. white fowl. Although they contained plenty of red blood they all bred true to their recessive (white) feathering.  
A friend of mine had for some thirty years a family of Hatch fowl which were very uniform and all came straight combed and yellow legged. I asked him if they had ever shown the roundhead and green legs and he said yes, but that he had observed the single combed yellow legged cocks seemed to be higher headed, smarter fighters. As a result, individuals with these physical traits were invariably picked for the brood yard. Since straight comb is recessive to pea comb, it is obvious that when his last roundhead died, he would never produce another roundhead within the family. On the other hand we know that yel low legs are dominant over green legs. Since after years of breeding yellow leg to yellow leg my friend ceased to produce any green legged specimens, the only explanation is that over the years the yellow legged fovn selected for his matings ceased to contain the recessive gene , for green legs. Yellow legs are dominant over green and when bred together if both parents are pure in the same dominant character, all of the offspring will inherit that dominant character. Interestingly, I have seen two chickens come with one yellow leg and one largely green. I have also seen some yellow legged individuals where the shade was so light as to almost appear white. Some white legged chickens will have tinges of slate color, but: db not be deceived because the laws of inheritance" do not allow for exceptions. In some breeds of fowl, there are incomplete dominant genes, which may mask- inherited characteristics. However, if the breeder is 'critical enough in his observations he should be at) lè to see through the masquerade.  
The discovery of sex linkage was Of monumental economic importance to the poultry industry. OriginalIy it was necessary to breed hybrid crosses to obtain the desired results, but I understand that now some strains have been established so that sex- determination is readily apparent. There are many truisms avai1able to the commercial breeder, some of Which would be of practical use to the breeder of game fowl. I have not intentionally experimented in this area, but through observation have discovered a fact which may be Worth passing on. If a red cock, and I think he should be pure in this characteristic, is bred to a pure grey hen, all of the stags will be grey and all of the pullets will be red.
 Will is Holding once gave me some of his Bruner Roundheads. I bred these for quite a few years and they came quite uniformly black breasted red roundheads with white legs. Every once in a while one would come and invariably it would be a male With yellow legs and straight combed. Willis confitmed that this also occurred ' in his chickens.
In many cases several genes are responsible for black brass-back inherited characteristics. These characteristics are mostly comparative, i.e. body size, cutting ability, power and constitution. It is important that we have this variation for without it we would have no selection, and if we have no selection improvement is impossible. We have already talked about size and how if we allow ourselves to breed down a family it is impossible to breed them up again without introducing outside blood. The same would hold true if you breed large to large within a family. After a period of time if you run out of smaller individuals to select from they will all come large. The key is selection. wise not to over do on any one characteristic.
I have a friend who likes plenty of leg under his chickens. In his words I want them "so that they can eat off the table'l. Fortunately for him he is cross-breeder so things never get out of hand. Were he to be forced to breed within a family it would not be long before he had a flock of storks.
Cutting ability is something needed in abundance. Again it is comparative, but breeding superior cutters is absolutely necessary. The one thing the breeder must do is be careful not to give up too many other good qualities in a concentrated effort to produce cutters.
Power and constitution normally go hand in hand. It is rare to find a hard hitting cock that does not also possess endurance. We know it is a characteristic inherited through several genes and is comparative, but can definitely be produced through the brood pen.
Many years ago a cocker friend of mine had a family of chickens that were pretty decent fighters and cutters, but short on power and constitution. They were game enough and more than held their own in local competition. We fought a couple of mains and met in local derbies. At the time Ted McLean and I were fighting together and we were using Hatch or Hatch crosses exclusively. The strong point of our fowl were power and constitution, so that when we met, if we were in the running after a few pittings, our cocks general ly won. My friend would invariably come up to Ted or myself afterward to comment on our excel lent conditioning.  I don 't know how many times we thanked him, but explained that it was not our conditioning, that the power was bred in them. No matter, he would not accept that explanation and insisted it was our conditioning. I felt sorry for his chicken man as he would berate him for his inability to get their chickens in "condition". He became so obsessed he would supervise their work, insisting they be given more work and another round when sparring. As a result, this did no good and in fact the cocks were worse for it. It was like trying to stretch a Quarter horse out to run a mi le and a half. Training can only sharpen the strong points and cannot be expected to correct the weak ones. The point here is, the brood pen is where features, both good and bad, are established.
I think it is obvious that good dispositions are most desirable in game fowl. This too is a comparative but one that can also be dealt with through inheritance. If chickens cannot easily be handled and conditioned, it makes the job of the breeder much more difficult and indeed impossible to realize the full potential of the fowl. If fowl cannot be readily tamed to become manageable, they will never attain their potential. Through mis-treatment, teasing, lack of knowledge of animals, poor environment, and a host of other reqsons, gamefowl which through inheritance are otherwise normal, can be made to become rogues. Since this is being written on the subject of breeding we will not get into these man-made problems in depth. Suffice it to say the breeder must always be aware that di spositions in animals are inherited, and tolerance of poorly tempered fowl will surely rear its head down the line, especially if any inbreeding takes place. Going back to our thirst for cutting ability, if we have a wonderful cutting cock that is also a borderl ine man fighter it would be a gamble to breed him to his mother, sistep, or any other closely rel ated fowl.
We once had a cock from Henry Bradford whose fowl were much like our family of Hatch. The cock was tame as a kitten ahd we bped him to some Hatch hens. In the Fall we penned some thirty stags. The fol lowing Spring, they were brought into the cock house to be prepared to  Every one was a man fighter. Instead of responding to gentle handling, they got worse. After a week we gave up and put them back in their pen walks. We brought them back i n the fol lowing year to be fought as cocks and if anything, they were worse. When bred to other cocks, the hens, (mothers of these cocks) did not produce man fighters, and I repeat the Bradford cock was very tractable. What caused each of the progeny to be mean? To this day I do not know. Maybe Mother Nature was trying to tell us something.

PART THREE
Basically there are four ways of breeding game fowl. One, by cross-breeding. Two by keeping a strain or strains. Three by breeding two or more closely bred families and four, which goes hand in hand with three, by the crossing of families to produce battle cocks.
The cross-breeder we have defined, is one whose fowl are ever changing. He has good years and bad years. If he admires a cock that he sees fight and the cock is available, he will breed him. If someones chickens are  doing well, he will try to get them. He has no real plan or direction. Like the breeder of thoroughbred horses, his motto is “breed the best to the best and hope for
the best". Thoroughbred horses are hybrids, combining the blood of English, Chinese, Turkish and Arabian horses. They will not tolerate inbreeding so that no strains or families can be established. Predictably then there is no uniformity. There are hundreds of cases where a mare and stallion have produced an outstanding individual, but when the mating was repeated even a number of times, the get was no where near as good. The thoroughbred breeder is stuck. All he can do is breed the best horses he can afford and hope that when the genes get together they will combine in a pattern that will produce a superior individual. In a recent publication an article focused on the performance of yearlings sold through public auction for one million dollars or more. There are many ways you can juggle the figures, but the bottom line is that of those that raced, only approximately thirty percent won a stakes race. This figure is credible too, since we are talking about over 100 individuals. This is certainly higher than the 2.7 percent stakes winners from foals which is the national average, and supports the theory of breeding the best to the best, but it is still a depressingly low success rate.
The cross-bred breeder of game fowl is doing the same thing, breeding hybrid to hybrid. He cannot hope to build uniformity, but unlike the thoroughbred breeder he has alternatives.
Through the years breeders have created strains. They have been established by combining bloodlines to produce what that individual sought most in his effort to create the perfect gamecock. They had to be inbred to "set" the desirable characteristics and continue to be inbred to maintain continuity. When inbreeding is practiced it sets both the good and the bad qualities. Depending on the skill of the breeder, the good qualities will be intensifed while the bad are kept to a minimum or hopefully bred out. Strains can be perpetuated without the addition of outside blood for a great many generations, provided the fowl are well cared for and healthy, and that a sufficent number are kept to provide a good selection. Unless it is absolutely necessary to correct a serious fault, no new blood should be added. I have heard of people adding new blood to "freshen" a strain when it had become "too inbred". This is not at all necessary, and every time you add new blood you add a whole new set of genes with which to contend.
Breeders have their own ideas as to what they want in a gamecock. I won't say there are no two alike, but there is plenty of variance. If you could go back twenty years and give six breeders an old time strain of say Wisconsin Red Shufflers, and have them breed them pure, then go visit their yards today you would probably not believe they were related. Each breeder would have their own "family" of Winconsin Red Shufflers. This could be most beneficical because in addition to not being alike in appearance, they would most certainly not fight alike, having been selectively bred according to each of the breeders differing ideas. Although the fountain head of each of the six families was the original strain of Wisconsin Red Shufflers, because they had been segregated and each bred pure, each would have their own set of differing genes. We can assume each of these families have redeeming features and also some faults. Let us say that breeder number one had fallen into the trap of breeding "breedy" looking chickens. They are good cutters and quick, smart fighters. They are coming rather small in size though, and do not have much bottom or constitution. Breed number two has always like rugged hard hitting cocks, and his family of Shufflers reflects his preferance. Say we cross these two families, and get terrific battle cocks inheriting the good points of both families. Now these terrific battle cocks will also be hybrids. How are we going to be able to keep producing them? By continuing to breed both families pure and crossing them in the same manner. We cannot breed the crosses together as we know they are hybrids. 
A cheap, quick illustration of what happens when we breed hybrid to hybrid can be done as follows. Buy some hybrid seed corn such as Silver Queen which is a white table corn. Plant it and enjoy eating it in the Summer, but keep enough seed to plant the next Spring. The resulting variations will be most apparent. You can do the same with any number of hybrid tomatoes available. Start your plants from seed’held over from the original hybrids and your production will be anything but uniform.
Ted McLean no longer has chickens but he is an avid gardener. He lives close by and we see a lot of each other. Three Summers ago he brought over some tomatoes he thought were great and we concurred, but when asked what they were he said he had no idea. Someone had given him the plant, and they did not know the variety. Anyway, he saved some seeds and grew some the next Summer and the next and all have bred true. They are firm yellowish 1n color and medium in size. He still has not bothered to find out what they are, but they are obviously a pure breed and not a hybrid.
When we crossed Shuffler family number one with Shuffler family number two and got terrific battle cocks we were indeed fortunate. The thought was sound, power and durability with quick smart fighters, but it by no means always works. Sometimes using the cocks of one family over the hens of another produces nothing, but when the sexes are reversed, the offspring is entirely different. Then too, when we crossed family number one and family number two, we might have got chickens we saw had merit, but were not exactly everything we wanted. Maybe we then crossed a cock from family number four over the number one by number two hens and did get great cocks. My point is that one must experiment to find the cross or blend that produces what is desired. I believe an excellent battle cross will produce after culling, eighty percent superior cocks and twenty percent above average. To expect more is probably unrealistic. I have to back off from the man who advertises ninety percent winners.

PART FOUR
By now it must be apparent to the reader my preference for producing cocks for the pit is the crossing and blending of pure bred families. This method is extremely popular with breeders of vegetables, fruits and domestic animals, and their wealth of experience must be respected. The research, experinfents and record keeping on domestic fowl are extensive to say the least. Although we know the breeding of game fowl may very well be the most difficult of all, we cannot ignore reviewing that material available to us. Since this is the only paper I know of which attempts to deal with the subject of breeding, by using common language only, one will have to become familiar with the terminology used by genetecists. If a breeder is serious in his endeavors, I think it is well worth the effort. The similarity of breeding for egg production, and breeding for body cutters may seem remote, but it may also prove to be quite helpful, and certainly thought provoking.
Further research and review of experimental breeding plans will also be helpful in maintaining strains and families. The average game fowl breeder may not at first be interested in what happens when Silver Seabright Bantams are bred brother to sister for ten generations, or what was produced from the third generation cross of Rhode Island Reds and Brown Leghorns. Experiments such as these have been made, indeed were necessary in order to understand some of the laws of inheritance.
I at one time got a trio of Grey fowl from E.W. Law. When I bred them together some came red, so they obviously had in them red blood. After one of the red stags molted, he grew out brown hen feathered plumage. Hen feathering is dominant over cock feathering, was at a loss to know what had happened. If hen feathering was recessive to cock feathering I would have assumed that at some time a "Hennie" had been bred into the Law Greys. But how would that account for the fact that the now Hen-Cock was as a stag cock feathered? After researching my books I found the answer. It has to do with a rare change in a sex hormone. Interestingly. the following year my Hen-Cock grew in cock plumage. Some readers may think 'I so what, all i am interested in is winners". To those I say, the more you know about breeding, the better off you will be in producing winners.
There are inherited characteristics which any carefull breeder can identify i.e. combformation, color of eyes, plumage, and body conformation. These are referred to as "Phenotypes • Equally there are inherited characteristics which are invisible, i.e. cutting ability, power, and fighting style. These are referred to as "Genotypes' Although the latter are comparative, and probably influenced by several sets of genes, the understanding of the "Phenotypes" may at least provide some clues as to the behavior of the 'l Genotypes". Furthur research in this area cannot possibly hurt the ambitious breeder.
Although we have not mentioned the term "prepotency" it is commonly used among breeders and refers to the ability of a strain or an individual to pass on their characteristics. Prepotency is usually connected with inbred specimens. Those are individuals with a concentration of genes which will 'stamp their get Il as is often heard. Although thi s general ly may be the rule, there are numerous instances of hens producing top chickens no matter what they where bred to, and they themselves were not truly inbred. If a breeder is fortunate enough to come up with such an individual he should line breed to it in the hope of retaining that blood. Line breeding is simply inbreeding  individual. In this case, the best son would  be bred back to the outstanding hen. Then the best son of that mating bred back to her. Then the best son of that mating bred back to her etc. Simultaneausly, the pullets from those matings should be bred and the offspring evaluated.
Today's American gamecock can pretty will be placed in one of two categories. The head and neck cutter, and the body cutter. The former is best in short inch and a quarter heels and the latter in long heels. I know very little about knife fighting, but I would think the body cutters would also be best using that weapon. I think inch and a half heels are really a kind of a noman  s Ìand and that both types are able to handle them. No matter, the breeder should take into consideration what type heel he will be using for the most part, and set his sights on the type fowl he wants to breed. The selection of a strain or strains, and the creation of one' s own family within that strain is the route to go. The selection of the breeding stock from generation to generation is the key. Some of the most promising matings turn out to be failures. It is important to recognize them as such, and go back and try something else. When refining a strain into the breeder's own family through inbreeding obscured traits crop up. These can be good and bad. The skill of the breeder is tested by the selections he makes. The goal is to intensify the good qualities and breed out the bad ones, Seldom is this fully attained. If a breeder is successful in establishing within a family three or four really good qual ities while holding their weaknesses to a minimum, he should be satisfied, If then he is able to establish a family with strength in the departments where the other is weak, he may very well, by crossing the two fami lies, produce sol id battle cocks. If he does, the chal lenge then will be to maintain the high level of each family, so that he continues to produce sol id battle cocks generation after generation. I hope the reader is soon confronted with this problem.