THE
ADVICE CENTRE
Preparing for Show Advanced
Preparation Check on the correct leg colour for your breed as stated in the Standard. If it should be yellow or orange, and the birds have been laying well, the yellow colour will go out of the legs into the yolks. Feeding cut maize will help counteract this, as will running the birds on grass. By the same token, if your bird should have white legs (or plumage) do not feed maize in order to avoid a yellow tinge. A proprietary louse powder or spray should be used periodically to ensure no parasites accompany your birds to the show. It is a good idea to apply the same treatment on return from the show. Precautions should have been taken against scaly-leg mite so that should not be present on your show birds. Make sure that the birds claws and beak are trimmed - be careful not to overtrim them. Dog or plier toenail clippers are the correct shape for this. All shows have an entry closing date which varies between several weeks to one week before the show. Make sure that you enter before this date, as late entries are not accepted. Check your entries are correct for the various classes and make sure you keep a record of what you have entered. Show Secretaries will provide entry information and a classification schedule if asked. Their addresses are in the Poultry Club Yearbook under Affiliated Societies, and lists of forthcoming shows are published in the various poultry magazines. If you have shown the previous year, you will usually be sent a schedule. Before the Show It is best to wash birds at least a week before a show to allow the natural body oils
to return to the feathers. Put the birds in a clean show pen in an area with lots of human
activity to get them used to the bustle of a show. The transition from free-range or
outdoor pen is so much easier if the bird is tame and used to being handled. The legs and
feet may need cleaning again in the run-up to the show. Those feather colours which are
liable to fade or change with prolonged exposure to sun and rain (e.g. buff, white, etc)
tend to be kept in outdoor runs which are covered over which will ensure they are still
fit and the correct colour. At the Show Birds are not normally fed or watered in show pens before judging as this can change the correct outline or create dirt and droppings, but take food in the form of grain (firmer droppings) to a show plus water in a container suitable to pour into containers for the bird. Not all shows are of sufficient duration to enable stewards to feed and water birds. Water containers are sometimes provided but it is advisable to take a two-hook cup drinker or a small plastic container which can be wired, pegged, or fixed to the pen so that it does not tip over. After judging has been completed you should feed your birds and check their water. Your birds will be required to remain at the show until the stated lifting time. This period is usually a good time to talk to the judge or other fanciers and learn more about the birds on display and why the birds have been placed in a particular order. Bear in mind when returning from a show that dusting with flea powder is a sensible precaution, and ideally, all show birds should be kept separate from your other stock for a week just to make sure that they have not brought something contagious home from the show, or that the stress of showing has not depressed their immune systems, allowing the entry of disease. A bit of cosseting after a show may well mean that a particular bird can be shown again soon, or return to the breeding pen in a fit condition. [ Poultry Club Home Page] [The Advice Centre] [ Conservation ] [Judges Forum] [ Breeds Gallery] [Shows and Exhibitions] [Education] [The Virtual Hatchery] [The Egg Box!] [Junior Fanciers] [Poultry Crazy!] [The Poultry Forum] [Email the Poultry Club]
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