Getting Started
in Gamefowl Breeding
Gamefowl breeding is a tedious and lengthy
undertaking that requires fulltime attention. If you don’t
have the heart for it, don’t do it.
The good thing about gamefowl breeding as a business though
is that, locally nowadays, there exist a big and lucrative market
for fighting cocks.
Many beginners get their initiation into cockfighting and gamefowl
breeding usually through family or friends.
When asked what they like most about breeding, majority of rooster-raisers
would say it’s the joy of coming out with a winner by
their own design.
Acquire as much information as you can about gamefowl
breeding before even buying a single rooster.
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Start
by visiting some experienced cockers and observing methods
of raising gamefowl. You can also learn so much from readily
available reading materials and videos on the subject.
If you’re an internet user, a number of good websites
about cockfighting can provide some of the information
that you need and you can also meet cockers and friends
from all parts of the world who could be more than willing
to share their knowledge and experiences. |
Start within your budget and with the right planning.
Plan your breeding within the limits of your time and budget.
As time goes on, you can keep your numbers down through selective
breeding and hatching. And you must be willing to cull any defective
or inferior birds. Huge farm is not a must to raise quality
gamefowls. Quality is more important than quantity.
Prepare your yard and have some housing ready for them.
Start with the right broodstocks.
It is said that “the end justify the means”, but,
although this may be true at some extent, in gamefowl breeding
the end result comes a little bit longer than others that you
can not just try any means for a shooting-an-arrow-in-the-dark
end.
Veteran rooster-raisers always say that gamefowl breeding becomes
very expensive and wasteful when you start with cheap brood
stocks. That is cheap in every sense of the word.
The first rule is to make sure that what you are breeding is
the right stuff or close to it. In choosing a good brood stock,
one must take into consideration the following steps:
a) Scout for winning bloodlines of breeders who have established
names in the field or breeders who are on a winning streak;
b) Choose which bloodline do you intend to produce;
c) If possible, find out the family tree of your preferred bloodline;
d) Try to seek the best source of the brood stocks that you
need;
e) When you have identified the best source try to get from
him the best that he got, even if you have to pay more;
One thing in common among those who
became successful in gamefowl breeding is the fact that they
all placed considerable investment on their brood stocks.
Partners Peter Uy & Joseph Choa never leave any stone unturned
when they are buying seed fowls in the United States. Tukaan
producer-host Emoy Gorgonia revealed that if Peter & Joseph
are offered a broodcock priced at $1,500, they would simply
offer back $2,000 for a better one or an ever higher amount
for a rooster that is supposedly not for sale. They look not
for the physical features, but for a rooster’s potential
to produce winners. Today, the partner’s farm in Antipolo
City is one of most preferred source of brood stocks locally.
A good example of someone who started it right, although, he
admits that he had to spend more than a million peso as “tuition
fee” before he learned his lessons is Sonny Lagon. With
only four years of serious breeding behind him, Lagon has earned
his place among the country’s finest game fowl breeders.
When he found out the right source of the brood stocks that
he needed, Bruce Barnette of Alabama, Sonny immediately made
his move. During one of his early visits to Barnette’s
farm, Lagon wanted to buy a particular rooster, but, was told
that it was not for sale. When Sonny insisted, Barnette jokingly
told him that he would only let go of the rooster for $5,000.
Right there and then, Sonny handed Bruce $5,000. The rooster
may not be worth that much, however, Sonny was able to earn
Barnette’s attention, trust and later on, friendship.
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There
are those who had been in the breeding business for years,
but never got off the ground. Why? Because they started
with the wrong or untested brood stocks. They probably
got bargain seed fowls in the beginning, but ended up
spending more and losing their investments in the long
run. And in game fowl breeding or in any endeavor, something
that is started wrong can never be made right. |
Important things that you should
know
a) Strain – a strain is a family of gamebirds
that have the same physical characteristics and easily recognizable
traits that make them different from the others and they must
also have the ability to reproduce themselves to be considered
a strain. Basically, all gamefowl breeds are man made designs
that first stem from the Wild Red Jungle Fowl of Southeast Asia
(the local labuyo perhaps). Through selective breeding, we now
have the birds we see today. Creating a strain is the result
of one man’s vision. It is developed through selective
breeding, for many generations with a single family.
b) Single breeding – a cock bred with
a single hen or rotating that cock with three or four hens that
are individually penned.
c) Group breeding – is breeding a cock
with a group of hens. It is similar to flock breeding except
a smaller amount of hens are bred to only oen cock at a time.
Specialize in only one or two breeds at the most.
The first thing to consider when you aim to be a breeder of
fine quality gamefowl is to specialize in one or two breeds
at the most. This could be done through line breeding, inbreeding,
out-crossing, semi-outcrossing and infusion.
a) Line Breeding – is the most common
form of maintaining a strain. This is when a cock is bred to
his mother, grand-mother or even his great-grandmother or if
a pullet is bred to her father, grandfather or her great-grandfather.
Breeding to their aunts, uncles or even to their cousins will
also work.
b) Inbreeding – is the breeding of brother
to sister. It is important when you need to accentuate or lock
in the good genes or traits of your strain.
c) Out-crossing – is when you bring in
new blood. The main purpose of out-crossing is to produce battlecocks.
These are the ones that you’re going to fight or sell.
d) Hybrid vigor –the main reason for
out-crossing is to establish a high degree of Hybrid vigor.
To breed an individual that is better, faster, stronger, smarter
and gamer than his parents is the result of hybrid vigor.
Sex of a chick is not a cocks’
fault.
A cock has thirty-nine pairs of chromosomes composed of one
pair of sex chromosome and thirty-eight pairs of autonomic chromosomes,
while, a hen has one sex chromosome instead of a pair. A cock
gives a sex chromosome to every fertilized egg, but a hen gives
her sex chromosome to maybe 50% of the fertilized eggs she lay.
If the fertilized egg receives sex chromosomes from both the
cock and the hen, it will hatch to be a stag (male), but if
the egg only has a sex chromosome from the cock, it will hatch
out to be a pullet (female).
Remember that as much as possible, always
keep youth to one sisde of the breeding. Breed a proven hen,
which is at least two years old, to a young brood cock and vice-versa.
With this information, I guess you can now start in gamefowl
breeding. Of course, be sure to provide your birds with the
best nutrition and health care available. A comprehensive vaccination
program is a must considering that game birds are very susceptible
to a wide range of avian pests and poultry diseases.
Lastly, keep track of each chick’s ancestry by keeping
good records, giving each brood cock or brood hen its own identification
code and marking each of their chicks with the identity off
the breeding that produced it. This can be done with toe punching
and nose marking, then later with wing and legbands. Through,
this you’ll be able to identify which pair of breeding
to continue with or to stop.
So, good luck and happy breeding.
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