Gallus gallus domesticus
✨ Wissenswertes
The Amrock essentially split from the Plymouth Rock gene pool over a century ago and has been bred in isolation by German fanciers ever since — making it one of the longest-running closed-flock chicken breeds in continental Europe. Genetically, it is now distinct from the American Plymouth Rock despite their shared ancestry.
A German-developed dual-purpose breed derived from the American Barred Plymouth Rock, standardised separately by the BDRG and recognised by the EE Europastandard as a distinct breed. The Amrock was developed from Plymouth Rock imports that arrived in Germany in the late 19th century, where German breeders selectively bred the barred variety into a heavier, more productive bird with slightly different conformation — broader, deeper-bodied, and with more tightly defined barring. The breed's name is a German portmanteau: 'Am' from American, 'Rock' from Plymouth Rock. Amrocks are exceptionally calm, reliable layers of brown eggs, and their barred plumage makes them one of the most recognisable farm breeds. Unlike the Plymouth Rock, which has multiple colour varieties, the Amrock standard focuses almost exclusively on the barred pattern. The breed is popular among German and Dutch smallholders for its uncomplicated, productive nature.
🏷️ Rasse
Amrock
💭 Temperament
Calm, docile, friendly, cold-hardy, good with children
📏 Größe
Large (3.2-4.1 kg)
⏳ Lebenserwartung
5-8 years
🎨 Farben
Barred (black and white barring, tightly defined); also white in some standards
🌍 Herkunft
Germany — developed from American Plymouth Rock imports, late 19th century
🏠 Lebensraum
Free-range or enclosed run; adaptable to any temperate farm system
🍽️ Ernährung
Layer pellets; good forager on pasture and farmyard
🎯 Zweck
Dual Purpose
🥚 Eifarbe
Brown
👑 Kammtyp
Single
🏅 EE-Klasse
Large Fowl