Cream Legbar Club Great Britain

Cream Legbar Club Great Britain Cream Legbar Club Great Britain connect with others who share similar interests & experiences.The pu The Cream Legbar is an autosexing type of chicken. Wry tail.

Raising Cream Legbar and breeding is not just a hobby it is an addiction. I've been breeding Cream Legbars since 2004 and over the past eleven years, we are successfully maintained the breed standard & blue egg laying capability of this famous Cream Legbar.Our stock is our own birds that are of a very high standard and rare Cream Legbar since 2004. We keep careful data of who lays the blue/olive e

ggs in our breeding stock/lines by careful selection & breeding only from our lines/ stock. We produce a high quality Cream Legbar, that meets the breed standards.There is no doubt that the stunning pastel coloured thick shells, the deep yellow yolk, dense white, and wonderful flavour, make the Cream Legbar eggs very special. Cream Legbar is a prolific layer, producing up to 240 eggs in the first year, and up to 430 over three years. In a good free range situation, many Cream Legbars have lived up to eight years. This means that you can tell the sex of the chick at hatch, and they breed true. The Cream Legbar originated as a cross between Brown Leghorns and Barred Rock with some Araucana blood in them. This is reflected in the crest and the blue eggs that they lay. The egg colour is usually blue, though some will give olive eggs. The Cream Legbar is quite an old, now very rare in its true form, pure breed. They are not anything to do with the commercial birds being used to produce multicoloured eggs for the supermarket trade. The first cream legbars I had at the Garden were a bad example of the breed. Like many breeders, I naively trusted the breeder who supplied & took them at their gurantee that these birds were cream legbars. It was quite some time later that I finally began to investigate the breed & understand that what cream legbar should look like was a far cry from what mine actually looked like. Cream Legbars are classy & elegant hens with cream capes and salmon coloured chests. They bring a splash of colour to any flock. Cream Legbars are very hardy and excellent foragers yet they are very friendly and inquisitive birds, always busy looking for morsals and they can be tamed quite easily. They are equally as good in Poultry shows as they are layers. I have found the cockerels to be non aggressive and very good flock leaders

Those cream legbars were sold to breeders where they would not be bred & I eventually sourced some correct eggs from show winning stock in order to begin again with cream legbar. It has become more and more obvious to me that not only are correctly coloured cream legbar of the breed hard to find, but also there seem to be too many cream legbar expert who actually know what the breed should look like. Ebay,Facebook,online shop,offline shop, etc are selling and being sold birds that are at best poorly coloured cream legbar examples and in many cases, simply a blue egg laying hybrid not cream legbar.We would like more breeders to become aware of what a cream legbar is supposed to look like so that they can make an informed decision when collecting cream legbar. Breed Standard

Origin: British

Classification: Light

Egg Colour: Blue, Green or Olive

General Characteristics:

Male

Carriage : Very sprightly and alert, with no suggestion of stiltiness. Type: Body wedge shaped, wide at the shoulders and narrowing slightly to root of tail. Back long, flat and sloping slightly to the tail. Breast prominent, and breast bone straight. Wings large, carried tightly and well tucked up. Tail moderately full at an angle of 45 degrees from the line of the back. Head: Fine. Beak stout, point clear of the front of the comb. Eyes prominent. Comb single, perfectly straight and erect, large but not overgrown, deeply and evenly serrated (5 to 7 spikes broad at the base), extending well beyond back of the head and following, without touching, the line of the head, free from ‘thumb marks’ or side spikes. Face smooth. Ear-lobes well developed, pendent, smooth and free from folds, equally matched in size and shape. Wattles long and thin. Neck: Long and profusely covered with feathers. Legs and Feet: Legs moderately long. Shanks strong, round and free of feathers. Flat shins objectionable. Toes, four, long, straight and well spread. Plumage: Of silky texture, free from coarse or excessive feather. Handling: Firm with abundance of muscle. Female

The general characteristics are similar to those of the male, allowing for the natural sexual differences, except that the comb may be erect or falling gracefully over either side of the face without obstructing the eyesight, and the tail should be carried closely and not at such a high angle. Male: Neck hackles cream, sparsely barred. Saddle hackles cream, barred with dark grey, tipped with cream. Back and shoulders cream with dark grey barring, some chestnut permissible. Wings, primaries dark grey, faintly barred, some white permissible; secondaries dark grey more clearly marked; coverts grey barred, tips cream, some chestnut smudges permissible. Breast evenly barred dark grey, well defined outline. Tail evenly barred grey, sickles being paler, some white feather permissible. Crest cream and grey, some chestnut permissible. Female: Neck hackles cream, softly barred grey. Breast salmon, well defined in outline. Body silver grey, with rather indistinct broad soft barring. Wings, primaries grey-peppered; secondaries very faintly barred; coverts silver grey. Tail silver grey, faintly barred. In both sexes: Beak yellow. Eyes orange or red. Comb, face, and wattles red. Ear-lobes pure opaque, white or cream, slight pink markings not unduly to handicap an otherwise good male. Legs and feet yellow. Weights Male 2.70-3.40 kg (6-7 lb) Female 2-2.70 kg (4-6 lb)

Serious defects: Male's comb twisted or falling over, Ear-lobes wholly red. Any white in face. Legs other than orange, yellow or light willow. Squirrel tail. Disqualifications: Side sprigs on comb. Eye pupil other than round and clearly defined. Crooked breast. Any bodily deformity. Scale of points: Type 30 Colour 20 Head 20 Legs 10 Condition 10 Weight 10

We are breeding pure Cream Legbar which meet the breed standard.We sell our birds and we are happy to take orders for both hatching eggs & cream legbar. Beware of inferior copies from unscrupulous traders (birds or hatching eggs)! Correctly coloured cream legbar only from us! Why? Too many UK & USA breeders are selling wrong cream legbar not only; Gold Legbar under the name of Cream Legbar, hybrid legbar crossed with mixed cream legbar for more eggs or more money from buyers. Now a days most of the breeders are removing chestnuts from cock/rooster legbar so they will show pure cream legbar! in ebay and online and various shows. Another US base group is saying "approved a motion to put together a Gold/non-dilute variety of the cream legbar,etc.Another person is selling cream legbar crossed with Ancona Bantams etc. under the name of cream legbar in Scotland. We advice not to buy any hatching eggs if someone is breeding cream legbar crossed with Ancona Bantams or other breeds. We collected all documentary evidence.

02/05/2020
Stay at home' - Doctors and nurses appeal to UKDoctors and nurses on the front line in the coronavirus crisis have made ...
23/03/2020

Stay at home' - Doctors and nurses appeal to UK
Doctors and nurses on the front line in the coronavirus crisis have made a direct appeal to the UK public.

"If you choose to stay at home, you will save lives," say healthcare professionals from the Belfast Trust respiratory team in a video that has been widely shared on social media.

It comes as the number of UK deaths reached 281, including a person aged 18 with an underlying health condition.

"If you choose to stay at home, you will save lives," say those on the front line in the coronavirus crisis.

Beware: Fraudulent Cream Legbar sellers in eBay .Others changed the image to make clown the buyers!  Attached latest cop...
27/05/2018

Beware: Fraudulent Cream Legbar sellers in eBay .Others changed the image to make clown the buyers! Attached latest copied today.

Chickens are kept in almost every country in the World and can survive in some very cold environments with just a little...
01/03/2018

Chickens are kept in almost every country in the World and can survive in some very cold environments with just a little care from us.

A common question I hear from chicken keepers in the UK is “Can Chickens Handle the Cold Weather?” Or “Will my Chickens Survive in the Cold Weather?”

The first thing I usually say to people is that Chickens are being kept successfully in Canada at temperatures below -20 degrees Centigrade and that they can actually handle the cold weather very well, it is usually the heat that causes them problems.

Chickens, like wild birds, trap air in between their feathers which insulates them and keeps them warm during cold weather. Pullets and hens will tuck their head underneath their wing whilst sleeping which also helps them to retain heat that is lost through the comb.

C***s with large combs can suffer from Frostbite to the Comb. This only occurs under certain weather conditions though but if you keep a male bird who has a large comb, you may need to consider taking precautions with him during freezing weather.

Should I insulate the chicken coop?

This is a very common question and my answer is always ‘No’ unless you live where the temperature drops regularly to -10 degrees and lower. Chickens need good ventilation in the coop to remove the ammonia that builds up from droppings so there is very little point in insulating the sides of the coop. Insulating the floor with a thick layer of wood shavings is about as far as I would go with ‘insulation’. During the summer months red mite can also be a real problem, so it is necessary to avoid providing places for red mite to hide.

How to protect chickens in cold weather.

The biggest priority is to ensure your chickens are not getting wet and are out of drafts whilst roosting in their house. Ventilation at low and high levels usually works well and the warm / moist air containing ammonia from droppings will rise from the floor and exit through the vent.

If there is an opening on the side of your coop at the same height as perches, use a shutter or cover to control the amount of ventilation there is into the coop. If the wind is blowing in through this then close it up.

I have some large ventilation openings built into my coops and I point these to the North so that most of the year they are open at night-time (our prevailing winds here in the UK are south-westerly) but I clip in boards to reduce the size of these openings if there is a North wind blowing which can sometimes happen and is always very cold as it is Arctic air and can bring snow as well.

Chickens will usually huddle together on a perch to keep warm.

Chickens and freezing weather or snow.

Chickens don’t take well to changes and snow can cause them to become stressed. Stressed chickens are more likely to become ill / pick up a passing disease. Imagine this from their point of view: as a chicken, you wake up one morning and step outside the coop to find the grass has gone and someone has changed the ground colour to white and you sink into this as you walk along with rather cold feet. As you can imagine, this must be pretty strange!

Food

If there is snow fall, clear a small area from around the coop so your birds can stand out of the snow. Hens should be able to reach their food and water without having to walk through the snow. I find a wide plastic snow shovel allows you to clear the area of snow quickly.

Flood effected area in Bangladesh... and Life.
16/08/2017

Flood effected area in Bangladesh... and Life.

cream legbar day old chicks.We're keeping Cream Legbar as a hobby and all money goes to Cream Legbar wellbeing and resea...
28/05/2017

cream legbar day old chicks.We're keeping Cream Legbar as a hobby and all money goes to Cream Legbar wellbeing and research.

We are deeply shocked by last night’s terrible events at the Manchester. Shocked. Can't believe what happened last night...
23/05/2017

We are deeply shocked by last night’s terrible events at the Manchester. Shocked. Can't believe what happened last night. Our deepest condolences to the families and friends of the victims. My thoughts and prayers go out to all those affected.

Pure Breed Cream Legbar
26/03/2017

Pure Breed Cream Legbar

Poultry keepers have been told to keep their birds inside to protect them from a highly-infectious strain of avian flu i...
07/12/2016

Poultry keepers have been told to keep their birds inside to protect them from a highly-infectious strain of avian flu in Europe.
Chicken, turkey and duck owners must keep them indoors for 30 days or take steps to separate them from wild birds.
The H5N8 bird flu strain has been found in poultry and wild birds in France, Sweden and other nations.
The government's chief vet Prof Nigel Gibbens said the risk to humans was low and no UK cases had been found.
The precautionary measures announced by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) apply to farmers and anyone in England who keeps any birds, even those with a few chickens in their back garden.
Farmers are being asked to look for signs of infection and to take robust disinfectant measures.
Members of the public are also being told to report cases of dead wild waterfowl - such as swans, geese and ducks - or gulls, or five or more dead birds of other species to Defra.
Defra said it had increased its surveillance, and keepers are being urged to make sure feed and water is not accessible to wild birds.
'Happy birds'
Daniel Brown, a chicken farmer from Cambridge with 40,000 hens in three sheds, said Defra had made the correct decision.
He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "We'll be shutting them in this morning. We'll be putting in extra toys for the birds - straw bales, empty bottles, cardboard boxes - anything to give them something else to think about.
"They love going outside, and now they can't for their own safety so we'll be doing anything we can just to keep the birds happy."
Prof Gibbens said: "We are closely monitoring the situation across Europe and have scaled up surveillance in response to the heightened risk.
"As a precaution, and to allow time for poultry and captive bird keepers to put in place appropriate biosecurity measures, we have declared a 30-day prevention zone to reduce the risk of infection from wild birds."
Prof Gibbens said the disease can get into housed birds and urged farmers to increase and maintain their biosecurity.
Last month, 190,000 ducks were culled in the Netherlands to try to prevent the spread of bird flu across northern Europe.
'Keep poultry inside' amid bird flu risk, keepers told
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-38231416

Measures are announced to protect poultry in England against an avian flu outbreak in Europe.

Example of fake cream legbar chicken eggs and breeders in eBay😇Most of them doing fraud with buyers.
31/08/2016

Example of fake cream legbar chicken eggs and breeders in eBay😇Most of them doing fraud with buyers.

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43 Beaufort Hill
Ebbw Vale
NP23 5QN

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