MamaSheepdog
Well-known member
dragonladyleanne":2pt4fw6f said:it is just my weird little language obsession that made me go looking for the "why" of the name change.
You are in good company here, with your little "language obsession".
dragonladyleanne":2pt4fw6f said:it is just my weird little language obsession that made me go looking for the "why" of the name change.
OneAcreFarm":hdut27zn said:Dood":hdut27zn said:A ha!
Argente means silver - renard argente means silver fox
I guess back in the day they only came in black so noir would be redundant, but with the new colours I think they should re-name them brun argente d'champagne, creme argente d'champagne, and noir argente d'champagne just to clarify things.
Actually, there IS an Argente Noir...it is a smaller rabbit than the Champagne D'Argent
http://www.thebrc.org/standards/N6-Argente%20Noir.pdf
Hi Jerry.. I know who you are... welcome to RT...champagne77":38fl69ra said:.I'm new on the site but not new to champagnes,if any of you follow convention results then you know who i am.
and yes there is... I was told that one of my does was to dark.champagne77":38fl69ra said:is such a thing as too dark,lol
which means its the only breed that qualifies to be called d'argents. None of the others are silver.
Dood":35uy9gne said:D'argents are not the only silvered breed - Silver fox carry the silvering genes 'si si' and my American Chinchilla's occasionally have silvered chestnut when bred to my New Zealand buck so it is found in those breeds as well. ( it is definitely silver and not a silver tipped steel, I have both in my blood line and the silvered kits radically change colour)
Fortunately Champagnes have remained out of the realm of pet breeders or have not really caught their radar so they tend to be bred to the standard for now and most hopefully into the future.
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