Campine Gallinas

Campine

Gallus gallus domesticus

Dato Curioso

Campine cocks are naturally hen-feathered — they grow no sickle tail feathers, no pointed hackles, and no curved saddle feathers. This makes them look nearly identical to the hens, a unique trait among European breeds.

A slender, elegant Belgian breed from the Campine region (Kempen) of Antwerp and Limburg, noted for its striking silver or gold plumage with beetle-green barred pencilling. Campines are distinctive for being hen-feathered in cocks — the males carry the same pencilled plumage as the females, lacking the long curved sickle tail feathers typical of roosters. An active forager and productive layer of medium white eggs, the Campine is now a rare conservation breed.

🏷️ Raza

Campine

💭 Temperamento

Active, alert, nervous, excellent forager, independent

📏 Tamaño

Small-Medium (1.8-2.3 kg)

Esperanza de vida

5-8 years

🎨 Colores

Silver Campine: white with barred pencilling; Gold Campine: gold with barred pencilling

🌍 Origen

Belgium — Kempen region (Campine), Antwerp and Limburg; ancient breed

🏠 Hábitat

Free-range; adapted to the flat, sandy heathlands of the Kempen

🍽️ Dieta

Layer pellets; historically forages on sandy heath and farmland

🎯 Propósito

Egg

🥚 Color del huevo

White

👑 Tipo de cresta

Single

🏅 Clase EE

Large Fowl