I've mentioned before that I'm working towards a specific set of colors in my mutt herd, but have had an AWFUL time with steel genetics.
I have a few does who are perfectly fine brood animals, a year or less old, just...steel carrying self colored and no longer useful as I move forward.
They worked well enough for what I needed them for, and to be honest it wasn't easy to produce them.
I could sell these nice girls as meat does. They have managed to make it past all of the things that I cull for. They are healthy, sweet tempered and good moms, or else I wouldn't hesitate to put them in the freezer. I know they could help feed someone's family, and be enjoyable to interact with while they are at it.
I have 3 self colored does who each carry a copy of steel.
2 lilac colored ones, and a blue. aa bb C_ dd EsE aa Bb C_ dd EsE
My conundrum is that I don't have the slightest idea how I could convince people that the pair are just lilac colored, and not Lilacs!!
Or that big blue isn't a blue New Zealand or a blue Silver Fox or an American (which she doesn't look anything like)
I would be horrified if someone bred the lilac colored mutts to a Lilac buck and tried to sell the babies as unpedigreed Lilacs!!! Likewise with the blue, I wouldn't want anyone messing up their blue NZ lines with the silvering gene that they all carry one copy of.
When I have sold mutts it's always been as mutts. I no longer tell buyers what breeds they are made of, because than people assume they are of that breed and not just a mutt!
But...it seems people feel OBLIGATED to call their rabbits by whatever breed that they most closely resemble.
Is there anyway around this...or would it be better to surrender them to freezer camp?
I don't suppose that it will be as much of a problem in the next generation. People will be less likely to mistake a big chestnut, opal, chocolate agouti, or lynx colored rabbit as any particular breed....right??
:clover:
I have a few does who are perfectly fine brood animals, a year or less old, just...steel carrying self colored and no longer useful as I move forward.
They worked well enough for what I needed them for, and to be honest it wasn't easy to produce them.
I could sell these nice girls as meat does. They have managed to make it past all of the things that I cull for. They are healthy, sweet tempered and good moms, or else I wouldn't hesitate to put them in the freezer. I know they could help feed someone's family, and be enjoyable to interact with while they are at it.
I have 3 self colored does who each carry a copy of steel.
2 lilac colored ones, and a blue. aa bb C_ dd EsE aa Bb C_ dd EsE
My conundrum is that I don't have the slightest idea how I could convince people that the pair are just lilac colored, and not Lilacs!!
Or that big blue isn't a blue New Zealand or a blue Silver Fox or an American (which she doesn't look anything like)
I would be horrified if someone bred the lilac colored mutts to a Lilac buck and tried to sell the babies as unpedigreed Lilacs!!! Likewise with the blue, I wouldn't want anyone messing up their blue NZ lines with the silvering gene that they all carry one copy of.
When I have sold mutts it's always been as mutts. I no longer tell buyers what breeds they are made of, because than people assume they are of that breed and not just a mutt!
But...it seems people feel OBLIGATED to call their rabbits by whatever breed that they most closely resemble.
Is there anyway around this...or would it be better to surrender them to freezer camp?
I don't suppose that it will be as much of a problem in the next generation. People will be less likely to mistake a big chestnut, opal, chocolate agouti, or lynx colored rabbit as any particular breed....right??
:clover: