Barbu de Grubbe Poules

Barbu de Grubbe

Gallus gallus domesticus

Fait Amusant

The Barbu de Grubbe is so rare that at one point in the 1980s, the entire global population was estimated at fewer than 30 birds kept by a single elderly breeder in a small village near Leuven. Without that one individual's dedication, this breed would have vanished without most of the world ever knowing it existed.

An exceptionally rare Belgian true bantam, the Barbu de Grubbe is one of the least-known members of the Belgian bearded bantam family and critically endangered even by Belgian poultry standards. Originating from the hamlet of Grubbe (or possibly the broader area of Flemish Brabant where 'Grubbe' was a place name), this tiny bearded bantam is clean-legged with a single comb, full beard and muffs, and a compact, rounded body typical of Belgian true bantams. Very little documented history survives about the Barbu de Grubbe, as it was developed by a very small circle of local fanciers in the early to mid-20th century and was never widely distributed. The breed was nearly lost entirely, and only through the extraordinary efforts of Belgian bantam specialists has it been recovered and stabilised. Recognised by the EE Europastandard, the Barbu de Grubbe represents the extreme end of European poultry diversity — a breed so localised it barely registered outside a single Belgian village.

🏷️ Race

Barbu de Grubbe (Grubbe baardkriel)

💭 Tempérament

Calm, gentle, very manageable, shy, delicate

📏 Taille

Very Small (0.4-0.6 kg)

Espérance de vie

5-8 years

🎨 Couleurs

Limited colour varieties — typically quail, silver, or muted colour patterns

🌍 Origine

Belgium — Grubbe, Flemish Brabant; developed early–mid 20th century

🏠 Habitat

Small garden or run; sheltered housing essential

🍽️ Alimentation

Very small amounts of standard poultry feed

🎯 Usage

Ornamental

🥚 Couleur des œufs

Cream

👑 Type de crête

Single

🏅 Classe EE

True Bantam