Hamburg Gallinas

Hamburg

Gallus gallus domesticus

Dato Curioso

Hamburgs were once called 'Pheasants' by English farmers for their wild, flighty nature. Charles Darwin used them in his breeding experiments and wrote about them extensively in 'The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication'.

One of the oldest and most elegant European breeds, known for centuries across northern Europe as 'Everyday Layers' for their consistent production of small, bright white eggs. Hamburgs are compact and beautifully marked birds — the spangled varieties carry perfectly round, beetle-green black moon-shaped spangles on every feather. They are active, alert, and superb foragers but prefer an open range lifestyle and can be flighty if confined. William Makepeace Thackeray was a noted admirer.

🏷️ Raza

Hamburg

💭 Temperamento

Active, alert, flighty, hardy, excellent forager

📏 Tamaño

Medium (1.8-2.3 kg)

Esperanza de vida

5-8 years

🎨 Colores

Silver-spangled, gold-spangled, silver-pencilled, gold-pencilled, black, white

🌍 Origen

Northern Europe (Germany/Netherlands); documented from 14th century

🏠 Hábitat

Free-range strongly preferred; dislikes confinement

🍽️ Dieta

Layer pellets; thrives foraging — historically called 'Moon Bird' for roaming moonlit fields

🎯 Propósito

Egg

🥚 Color del huevo

White

👑 Tipo de cresta

Rose

🏅 Clase EE

Large Fowl