Author Topic: Comment on Champion AOSB  (Read 7730 times)

Suki

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Comment on Champion AOSB
« on: October 31, 2015, 01:10:28 PM »
Mike Gilbert put up John's champion, and I sent it to BYC as i know that Walt Leonard, the APA Standards President hangs out there and wanted his comment...I am resposting it here in full.

<quote>
Well since there is only one noteworthy black Ameraucana. The one that won Best of Show at the APA National meet. I have to say that there is no comparison between the two birds. This bird has no chest...which is supposed to be prominent. In addition the wing set is incorrect.....too low. The back is supposed to SLIGHTLY elevated at the shoulders. The APA Standard says nothing about it sloping to the rear. Someone needs to read the Standard and look at the Standard illustrations.</quote>

Brownie,
« Last Edit: October 31, 2015, 01:20:54 PM by BrownEyes »

Mike Gilbert

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Re: Comment on Champion AOSB
« Reply #1 on: October 31, 2015, 05:09:48 PM »
You can tell Walt Leonard maybe he should talk to the one who helped write the Standard to find out what it means.   I also approved the Standard illustrations before they were published.   They are not very good at all, but we were under a deadline at the time and the artist could not come up with anything better.   The bird on the cover of the APA Yearbook is way too level, has way too high of a tail, and even has purple barring in the tailfeathers.   It's ridiculous a panel of judges would pick a bird like that to be top large fowl of any show.  This is why a lot of us are not much interested in showing any more, and especially under certain judges.   I'll take John's bird any day of the week over the other one.    You can quote me on that.  John would be the first to say his bird is far from perfect - he sold it at the show.   But the wings of both birds in the photos are in the exact same position.   The other one's tail is way higher than John's, and the slope of the back on John's bird is just exactly the way the Standard was intended.  Further, you can't judge a bird's chest based on one photograph.  You would have to handle the bird, and observe it from the front as well as side views.

« Last Edit: November 01, 2015, 07:18:38 AM by Mike Gilbert »
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Russ Blair

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Re: Comment on Champion AOSB
« Reply #2 on: October 31, 2015, 07:29:11 PM »
That is exactly why I would never enter an online poultry show. Pictures never show how a bird really looks. I thought John bird looked a lot better in person. The picture did not do it justice in my opinion. Funny how one judges opinion over another's can very. Proving that it's up to what you the judge prefers at any given show. I for one still have my opinions on what makes a nice Ameraucana and that's what I will continue to breed for 😃
S.E. Michigan

Mike Gilbert

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Re: Comment on Champion AOSB
« Reply #3 on: October 31, 2015, 07:46:58 PM »
Russ, that is good advice for anyone.   Keep on breeding for what you believe to be right, regardless of any one judge's opinion.   When you start seeing a trend over several years of time and a good number of shows, then it is time to pay closer attention.
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Suki

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Re: Comment on Champion AOSB
« Reply #4 on: October 31, 2015, 09:33:02 PM »
Frankly, as a beginner, I found the whole thing rather dispiriting whether it is virtual or real.

Brownie
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Cesar Villegas

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Re: Comment on Champion AOSB
« Reply #5 on: November 01, 2015, 12:23:24 PM »
That is exactly why I would never enter an online poultry show. Pictures never show how a bird really looks. I thought John bird looked a lot better in person. The picture did not do it justice in my opinion. Funny how one judges opinion over another's can very. Proving that it's up to what you the judge prefers at any given show. I for one still have my opinions on what makes a nice Ameraucana and that's what I will continue to breed for 😃

Online poultry shows is just meant for fun. I've entered some birds on one. Its just for kicks, anyone who takes it seriously is clearly a novice. The one on Facebook has brought attention to the Ameraucana breed, to me thats a positive. Last show Ameraucanas was the 2nd most entered breed.

John W Blehm

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Re: Comment on Champion AOSB
« Reply #6 on: November 01, 2015, 06:33:03 PM »
...Pictures never show how a bird really looks...😃

Some birds pose better than others and it has always been a battle trying to get good photos of each winning bird at our National Meets.  When the Poultry Press takes photos of winning birds they generally put them in a special box designed for that purpose. 
I'm not knocking online judging of photos for those that are interested, but it does seem logical that birds that like to pose and exhibitors with better camera skills have an edge.
I have only seen a photo of so or the bird Leonard is referring to that won at the at APA National Meet last year.  He looked very nice and think the judges were struck by his "exotic" look, due to recent crossbreeding of that line. 
Mike wrote the Ameraucana Standard with some help.  In the descriptions the words "medium" or "moderate" are used several times for males and again for females.  I created the LF black Ameraucanas and even though I don't have any perfect ones...I don't know of any better.
The Champion AOSB cockerel that I had was sold to Neil & Donna, but I still have 3 of his brothers to breed from and they are similar to that winning bird.  Here are a few photos of a couple I have.  Some poses show more of a "prominent" breast, more and less slope of the back, different tail angles and whatever.  Some things that can't be disputed are things like the length of the tails are not too long, they have correct eye color and great pea combs.
« Last Edit: November 01, 2015, 06:36:15 PM by John W Blehm »

Russ Blair

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Re: Comment on Champion AOSB
« Reply #7 on: November 01, 2015, 06:45:15 PM »
They look good to me John, none are perfect. Every Bird I have Bred or even seen at a show had some flaw. If they all hatched out perfect there wouldn't be much fun in it. I don't have nothing against the online shows as well. It's just something I do not have the patience for (chicken pictures that is). It's definitely easier with a Bird, one has been conditioning for show. Unless I am doing something wrong? But standing in there there best pose it crucial to getting the second look from the judge 😉
S.E. Michigan

John W Blehm

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Re: Comment on Champion AOSB
« Reply #8 on: November 01, 2015, 07:16:19 PM »
Once you get past what birds are the best in a show according to the Standard, other things do come into play as they are judged.  Between two identical birds the better groomed one will stand out, just as the friendlier, calmer one will. 
Personality matters.  Our club member, Mary Lou Phelps, had a bantam wheaten hen, named "Sweetie" that was tame as any pet and won Champion Ameraucana Over-All at least twice.  Mike had a bantam buff male that would jump out of his pen and onto Mike's hand when the door was opened.  Walter Malcolm's bantam silver hen, Coral, is as close to him as a boy and his dog.
Because black is easier to get the color right with, it is the color that will usually win BB and go on to Champion Row. 
So those that are most interested in winning try to put all the above into one neat package.   

Mike Gilbert

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Re: Comment on Champion AOSB
« Reply #9 on: November 01, 2015, 07:35:14 PM »
Ah, the old days!   Mary Lou actually won BB three times at national meets on that little wheaten hen.    Of course hens stay in condition much longer when they don't lay eggs any more. 
Mike Gilbert
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Mike Gilbert

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Re: Comment on Champion AOSB
« Reply #10 on: November 01, 2015, 07:38:01 PM »
John, that bottom black rooster has just too much bottom fluff for my taste.   Makes his legs look way too short.   He does have a beautiful back and tail - topline.    I realize it is only a photo - maybe he was squatting a bit?   Or maybe it's a bad camera angle?    The others look real nice.   The one on the left in the top photo has the proper main sickle feathers extending past the main tail.
« Last Edit: November 01, 2015, 07:43:55 PM by Mike Gilbert »
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John W Blehm

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Re: Comment on Champion AOSB
« Reply #11 on: November 01, 2015, 11:01:28 PM »
Or maybe it's a bad camera angle?

I saw the same thing before posting that photo, but put it up anyway.  He was about 3 feet lower than me and too close when I took the picture from outside the pen.  Some other photos don't look as bad in that area, because the birds were further away.

Harry Shaffer

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Re: Comment on Champion AOSB
« Reply #12 on: November 02, 2015, 06:34:20 PM »
John Blehm,  The black cock you sent me had a lot better type than the bird I have from that other strain.  I have seen many birds starting to get very long backs and loose the type of the example  that is in the APA standard.

Tailfeathers

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Re: Comment on Champion AOSB
« Reply #13 on: November 03, 2015, 05:08:28 AM »
I agree with Walt that the chest is supposed to be prominent.  It's something I've been working on and something I see missing in a lot of birds.  You'll notice in my avatar what I would think is a "prominent" breast BUT it sure doesn't look like the illustrations in the SOP.

I still have a pic of the 2014 APA Champion and am attaching it for review/comparison to John's bird.  I tried to get them side by side but couldn't do it.  From these pics, I'm not sure what Walt is talking about wrt the breast.  Note the head/neck position in both pics is forward.  So that may be a cause for a lack of seeing the breast but if you look at the very bottom pic of my Wheaten, the head/neck is forward but breast still pretty well defined.  So my guess is the APA Nat'l bird didn't have a "prominent" breast either.   I'm also not sure what he's talking about wrt wing carriage.  Both breast and wing carriage appear to be very similar in the pics.  And I don't know how one can have "slightly elevated at the shoulders" and not have the back sloping toward the rear??  Finally, if you look at the backs in the 3 illustrations provided in the Standard, none of them are the same. 

Personally, I thought the pic posted of John's bird showed him too high at the shoulders but Mike says it's "very correct".  The pic of 2 Wheatens are birds I culled but show the backs I've been working towards.  And obviously head position affects the sight picture of the back as shown in the second Wheaten pic of the same 2 birds.  "Slightly elevated" to me is just above the horizontal. 

And btw, on a side note, speaking of going by the SOP Illustrations, Mike can you please verify that the pic of the BW male shows incorrect coloring in the wing bay?  Doesn't really matter to me because if I can get the bows to be more orangish and the bays a little lighter, I'll be pretty satisfied with the overall color but I know a new SOP is coming out so it would be worthwhile I think to point out the blue shouldn't be there at the end of the Primaries.

As for the online virtual show I won't be submitting any pics again for awhile.  I don't mind coming in 2nd, 4th, or 10th for that matter when the birds placed higher are better or even debatably better but the way they placed the W & BW in September left me baffled for the most part.  Look at the Wheaten cockerel that took 2nd too see what I mean.

« Last Edit: November 03, 2015, 05:31:52 AM by Tailfeathers »
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Mike Gilbert

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Re: Comment on Champion AOSB
« Reply #14 on: November 03, 2015, 06:36:06 AM »
Lots of good points in your post Royce.   I'm not sure what I'm supposed to be looking at with regard to the Blue Wheaten wing bay.   Could you put up an enlarged photo of what you want evaluated?    With regard to the two blacks.   You are correct, the wing carriage in both are the same, and they are both correct - which is to say carried above the hock joint.   There is room for some variation in that description.   The point about the back being elevated at the shoulders is well taken.   I guess "slightly" means different things to different readers.   I do think John's bird is standing a little too high in that photo, not much, but remember, I saw him in the flesh.   The photo was taken in haste the morning after the show as Neil was leaving, so I didn't have time to wait for that perfect pose.  On the other hand, the other bird is too low in front.   Put water on that bird's back and it would run toward the front, not toward the tail.   How is that elevated at the shoulders?     I have seen quite a few photos of the APA winner, and they all look about the same.   John and I have discussed the fact that he looks to be part Sumatra.   Tom Kernan bred him, is noted for his terrific Sumatras, and we feel there is a cross somewhere in the bird's ancestry.   My best guess is that he is about one quarter Sumatra.   Of course we could be wrong, but that bird is a different style than what Ameraucanas have been bred to be in the past.   The short legs contribute heavily to my opinion.  He is a beautiful bird to be sure, and in top condition and in great feather.   But he lacks in certain points of type to be an ideal Ameraucana.  Neither bird has the two main sickle feathers extending beyond the main tail as shown in the Standard.
« Last Edit: November 03, 2015, 07:48:48 AM by Mike Gilbert »
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