Gallus gallus domesticus
✨ Fait Amusant
The Bourbourg shares its name with the town's famous 17th-century carillon — a bell tower that still rings out over the flat Flemish landscape where this breed was developed.
A rare French dual-purpose breed from the town of Bourbourg in the Nord department, near the Belgian border. The Bourbourg was developed in French Flanders during the 19th century from local farmyard chickens crossed with imported Asian breeds, producing a large, sturdy bird with good meat qualities and respectable egg production. Its plumage is typically white or ermine (white with black markings), and it has a single comb and clean, slate-blue legs. The breed was once common on farms across French Flanders but declined dramatically with agricultural industrialisation after World War II. Now critically rare, the Bourbourg is maintained by a small network of French conservation breeders and is recognised by the EE Europastandard and SCAF as a distinct French heritage breed.
🏷️ Race
Bourbourg
💭 Tempérament
Calm, docile, hardy, good-natured, manageable
📏 Taille
Large (3.2-4.1 kg)
⏳ Espérance de vie
5-8 years
🎨 Couleurs
White, ermine (white with black tail/hackle markings)
🌍 Origine
France — Bourbourg, Nord (French Flanders); 19th century
🏠 Habitat
Free-range or enclosed run; adapts well to farmyard conditions
🍽️ Alimentation
Layer pellets; moderate forager
🎯 Usage
Dual Purpose
🥚 Couleur des œufs
White
👑 Type de crête
Single
🏅 Classe EE
Large Fowl