Czech Gold Brindled Hen Explained

Czech Gold Brindled Hen
Status:rare
Country:Czech Republic
Maleweight:2.3–2.8 kg, maximum 3.3 kg
Femaleweight:2.0–2.5 kg, maximum 3 kg
Eggcolour:cream (yellowish to pale brown)
Type:Chicken
Latin:Gallus gallus domesticus

The Czech Gold Brindled Hen, '''Česká slepice zlatě kropenatá'''|italic=no, is an old breed of chicken originating in Bohemia. The first mention dates from 1205, when a flock of these chickens was presented to Valdemar II of Denmark as a wedding gift on his marriage to the Czech princess Dagmar of Bohemia. [1] Nowadays it is an endangered breed.[2]

Description

Hens are mostly gold color only, while the rooster has gold feathers on the neck. The feathers on the back are brown to gold-red. Wings feathers are brown with green mirror. Tail is black. Breast are back with gold bringle. The beak is slate to dark brown with the yellow end. Hens are completely light brown gold brindled. On the head there is a single red comb. Legs are slate blue color. Hens produce 160 eggs per year of 55–60 g weight. Chicks hatch out light brown.

References

  1. Web site: Czech gold brindle chicken . Czech chickens society. 2012-08-12.
  2. Web site: Performance and effective population size of Genetic Resources in Czech Republic – Czech gold brindled hen. Gardiánová, I., Šebková, N., Vaníčková M.. Faculty of Agrobiology, Food and Natural Resources CULS Prague. 2012-08-12. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140525213818/http://www.eaap.org/Previous_Annual_Meetings/2009Barcelona/Papers/01_Gardianova.pdf. 2014-05-25.