Gallus gallus domesticus
✨ Dato Curioso
East Frisia is a region so flat, windy, and wet that locals joke you can see your dog running away for three days. The Ostfriesische Möwe's gull-like colouring is perfect camouflage in a landscape where seagulls are often the only birds visible on the featureless horizon.
A striking German dual-purpose breed from East Frisia (Ostfriesland), the coastal region of Lower Saxony bordering the North Sea. The Ostfriesische Möwe — literally 'East Frisian Gull' — is named for its gull-like colouring: predominantly white body with black tail feathers and sometimes black wing markings, resembling the herring gulls that follow fishing boats along the Frisian coast. Developed in the early 20th century from local East Frisian farm chickens, it was selected for good egg production and decent meat quality in a hardy, wind-resistant package. Ostfriesische Möwen were common on small mixed farms across the Frisian marshes but declined when the region's agriculture shifted toward large-scale dairy and arable farming after 1950. Rescued by German conservation breeders, the breed is recognised by the EE Europastandard and BDRG.
🏷️ Raza
Ostfriesische Möwe (East Frisian Gull)
💭 Temperamento
Calm, hardy, cold-tolerant, good forager, steady
📏 Tamaño
Medium-Large (2.3-3.2 kg)
⏳ Esperanza de vida
5-8 years
🎨 Colores
White body with black tail and black wing markings (gull-coloured)
🌍 Origen
Germany — East Frisia (Ostfriesland), Lower Saxony; early 20th century
🏠 Hábitat
Free-range or enclosed run; built for harsh North Sea coastal conditions
🍽️ Dieta
Layer pellets; effective forager on coastal marshland and pasture
🎯 Propósito
Dual Purpose
🥚 Color del huevo
White
👑 Tipo de cresta
Single
🏅 Clase EE
Large Fowl