Norfolk Grey Hühner

Norfolk Grey

Gallus gallus domesticus

Wissenswertes

Fewer than 200 breeding Norfolk Grey birds are believed to exist worldwide. Their near-extinction came after World War II when commercial hybrid chickens replaced all dual-purpose farm breeds in Britain almost overnight — the Norfolk Grey's population collapsed from thousands to near-zero within two generations.

A rare British dual-purpose conservation breed created in Norfolk during World War I by Fred Myhill of Norwich, by crossing Birchen English Game with Silver Duckwing Leghorns. Myhill aimed to produce a self-sufficient farmyard bird suited to East Anglian conditions — and the result was a handsome, upright bird with striking silver-birchen plumage. Cocks carry silver hackle, black body and breast with silver lacing; hens display silver-grey pencilled plumage. Once popular across East Anglian farmyards, they are now critically rare and maintained by Poultry Club of Great Britain (PCGB) conservation breeders.

🏷️ Rasse

Norfolk Grey

💭 Temperament

Calm, active, alert, good forager, cold-hardy

📏 Größe

Large (2.7-4.1 kg)

Lebenserwartung

5-8 years

🎨 Farben

Cocks: silver hackle, black body and breast; Hens: silver-grey pencilled plumage

🌍 Herkunft

England — Norfolk; created by Fred Myhill circa 1910–1915

🏠 Lebensraum

Free-range or enclosed run; well-adapted to British conditions

🍽️ Ernährung

Layer pellets; good forager on pasture and farmland

🎯 Zweck

Dual Purpose

🥚 Eifarbe

Tinted

👑 Kammtyp

Single

🏅 EE-Klasse

Large Fowl