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Domestic Show Flight
Standard
The standard Domestic Show
Flight is based on the Plain Head solid colored "ideal" of this breed. The
"ideal" being the perfect bird. The scoring of this breed has been grouped into
three (3) sections, namely: (1) OUTLINE - 25 pts. (2) FEATHER - 25 pts. (3)
FEATURES - 50 pts. for a total of 100 pts. Additional points in their own class:
CAP (CREST) - 10 pts.; MOTTLE MARKED - 25 pts.
GENERAL TABLE OF POINTS
GROUP (1) OUTLINE
(A) HEIGHT 5 pts.
(B) LENGTH 5 pts.
(C) BREAST 5
pts.
(D) NECK 5 pts.
(E) LEGS 5 pts.
OUTLINE 25 pts.
GROUP (3) FEATURES
(A) CROWN 20 pts.
(B) BEAK 15 pts.
(C) EYE 10 pts.
(D) EYE CERE 5 pts.
FEATURES 50 pts.
Total points for solid Plainhead 100 pts.
Total points for solid Cap (crest) 110 pts.
Total points for mottle Plainhead 125 pts.
Total points for mottle Cap (crest) 135 pts.
The following description
is used as a base to judge for the "ideal", perfect pigeon. The term "must" is
used when referring to the ideal bird. Specific variations of the ideal are
noted.
Section (1) OUTLINE:
The outline of the bird covers the outer surface and does not include the head
properties nor the feathers of the bird, and is scored according to the
following:
(A) HEIGHT (5 pts.):
The height of the bird standing erect must be eight inches from the base of the
foot to the top of the head.
(B) LENGTH (5 pts.):
The length of the bird must eight and one half inches measured horizontally from
the furthest point of the breast to the tip of the tail.
(C) BREAST (5 pts.):
The breast must be semi-circular and measure four and one half inches from the
outer wings. It must be high and prominent.
(D) NECK (5 pts.):
The neck must be two and one quarter inches in diameter at the middle. From the
lower mandible the line of the throat must incline in a graceful arc; the
furthest point of inclination to end in an imaginary vertical line with a point
at the equal distance between the pupil of the eye, and the break of the frontal
of the nostrils. The base feathers of the neck, at the front covering the breast
and at the sides covering the wing arms, must be uniform. The base feathers at
the back of the neck must be as low down on the back as possible. The upper back
portion of the neck must be bully.
(E) LEGS (5 pts.):
The legs must be straight, stout, two and one quarter inches apart, and in a
vertical line with the eye. The tarsus or leg stems must be one inch from the
ball of the foot to the bend at the knee or hock, covered three quarters of the
way down on the tarsus with feathers. The nails must be bone colored, the toes
straight and stout, and the color of the tarsus and feet the same color as the
eye cere and nostrils.
IN GENERAL:
The keel must end off as low as possible behind the legs, the tail tips one half
inch off the floor, the wings close to the body, the primary flight tips must
set on the tail and end one half inch from the end of the tail. The general
appearance must be ruddy, cobby, uppity, and vigorous.
JUDGES NOTE:
After the total of the points for the above has been scored, the judge may make
further deductions from this total for the general appearance of the bird as he
sees fit, so far as outline is concerned.
Section (2) FEATHER:
This pertains to the feather of the bird exclusively. It has no bearing on
outline or the features, later to be explained.
(A) COLOR (20 pts.):
The color of the feathers of all parts of the bird (subject to the class they
represent) excluding the primary flight tips and the primary coverts (which are
to be white) must be of a clear and deep uniform color over all the body except
on the neck and breast where there may be found an iridescent hue of the color
present. The iridescence denotes good health and must be allowed. However, at
the frontal end top of the head, at the three beards, both sides of the face,
the breast, sides of the wings, the keel, the belly, the vent, the coverts under
the tail, the rump, the sides of the rump, the back, the thighs, the legs, and
numbers 7 to 10 of the upper medium coverts must have no off-shading of the
original color. The tail must have twelve tips (12 upper and 12 lower coverts).
(B) PRIMARY FLIGHT TIPS (5 pts.):
The 20 primary flight tips, (10 on each wing) must be white. One quarter point
is allowed for each white tip.
IN GENERAL:
The color must be clear, uniform, deep, and brilliant. the general feathering
must be tight and clean.
JUDGES NOTE:
Allowance to color: Any bird showing a tinge of a third color of his base color
shall be penalized ten points and additional points as the judge sees fit. This
also includes the bar variety. Also, after the total of the points the judge may
make further deductions from this total as he sees fit. If any part-colored
primary tips occur from numbers 1 to 4 in succession after the solid colored
tips on each wing one quarter point will be deducted for each parti-colored tip.
If the socks, vent, belly, keel, legs, or epaulets ( numbers 7 to 10) of the
upper medium coverts show any white in solid colored classes deductions not to
exceed two points for either may be made except when any discoloration of any
feather of the tail or secondary flight tip is more than half the length of the
quill of the feather. The judge will deduct from 10 to 20 points allotted for
color as he sees fit. When any discoloration of any feather of the tail or
secondary flight tip is less than half the length of the quill of that feather
the judge will deduct from 1 to 9 points allotted for color, as he sees fit.
(Party-color means basic color of the bird plus white).
Section (3) FEATURES (50 pts.):
This pertains to the head properties only and has no bearing with outline and
feather.
(A) CROWN (20 pts.):
The crown is referred to as the top line of the head starting at the feather of
the nostrils (known as the break) continuing in a high prominent arc, widening
and declining gracefully into the upper back of the neck. Frontal or forehead,
the top and side view of the frontal must show the frontal over-lapping the
feather line of the nostrils. The front view must show the frontal as broad and
deep as that of a Long4aced Tumbler. In general, it must be round and prominent.
The front face of the bird must be pinched at the sides, refined and inset, and
have a smile-like appearance at the mouth.
(B) BEAK (15 pts.):
The beak must be set in deep at the nostrils, blood red in color from the mouth
to midway on the upper and lower mandibles to the points of both mandibles and
the beak must be a clear ivory color. The line of the beak separating the two
mandibles must straight, imaginarily tangent to the base of the eye, and
parallel to the floor. The beak must be one inch long from the mouth to the
point of the beak, three-sixteenths of an inch thick and three-sixteenths of an
inch wide at the nostrils, tapering gracefully to a point toward the end of the
beak. The upper mandible may be allowed a small, hardly noticeable roll at the
tip in order to over-lap the lower mandible at the point of the beak. The
nostrils must be as refined as possible.
(C) EYE (10 pts.):
The eye must be circular, set in the center of the general head and divided into
two portions. Noticeable, the large white portion known as the Iris, and the
black center, known as the pupil The eye must be pearly white, and free from
other colored matter. It must be one quarter inch in diameter. The pupil or
focus must be in the center of the eye, and round and small as possible, noted
black in color, having no breaks at the outer line, nor any blemishes on the
black portion whatever. The eye must appear shiny and alert.
(D) EYE CERE (5 pts.):
The eye cere is the muscular and blood colored portion of the flesh surrounding
the eye. Free from feather, this cere is the eyelid of the bird. When open, only
this muscular portion of the lid is noticeable and must be the same blood red
color as the feet, nostrils, and mouth of the beak.
IN GENERAL:
The features must be pleasant, prominent, bright in color, alert, and
aristocratic in appearance.
JUDGES NOTE:
After the total points for the above has been scored, the judge may make further
deductions from this total as he sees fit, so far as features are concerned.
(A) CAP (CREST) CLASSES: 10 points additional. SIDE VIEW:
From the ear starting as a rosette or spade, the reversed feathers or tufts must
be full and rise in a diagonal arc, to a point in a level line with the top of
the head. TOP VIEW: Starting one quarter inch away from the head at the ears,
the line of the tufts must gracefully increase in distance from the head, until
it reaches a point one and one half inches from the center top of the head. The
declining feathers at the back of the head must not interfere with the long
rising tufts at the cap (crest). A clear opposition must be noted at this point.
(B) MOTTLE MARKED CLASSES: 25 points
additional.
The markings are to be as follows: The thirteen secondary flights, twelve major
coverts, one to six of the upper medium coverts, seven to ten of the upper
medium coverts known as the epaulets, the tail, vent, rump, belly, thighs, and
legs must be of a solid-color of the color present. The lesser coverts of the
wings, back, neck, head, breast, flap, and forward portion of the keel, spot for
spot (see sketch).
JUDGES NOTE:
The judge may make further deductions after the total of points for either cap
(crest) or mottle marked has been scored. Any bird having at least one white
feather on any part of the body other than socks, keel, vent, belly, epaulets,
primary flight tips, or primary coverts must be judged in the Mottle or the
Stock Class (exhibitor's choice).
MIS-MARKED, STOCK, AND AOC CLASSES:
The mis-marked, stock, or AOC class consists of pieds. beards, blaze faced, blue
teager, tortoise-shells, blue checkers, three distinct colored birds, sugar
tails, silver Teagers, Strawberries, short tipped and over-tipped solid birds,
badly colored finished tip birds and any other color not listed below under
official show colors.
OFFICIAL SHOW COLORS:
Barred colors: Blue - A grayish, blue body, with two black bars on the wings,
and one black bar on the tail. Silver - A creamy tan body, with two dun bars on
the wings and dun bar on the tail. Solid colors: Black - Must be iridescent and
as brilliant as black satin. Dun - Clear and unblemished, and like that of a
shell of chestnut. Brown - A warm pure cocoa brown, clear and unblemished. (Note
that brown is judged with black and dun). Red - Blood red, clear, and
unblemished. Yellow - Yellow-gold to orange, clear, and unblemished. (Note: In
the case of extremely light marked or heavy marked Teagers, extremely poor
colored finished tip solid birds, and sugar tail birds having discoloration more
than half the length of the quill, the exhibitor will be afforded the choice of
entering these birds in the show class they represent or in the stock, mismark,
or AOC. class).
DISQUALIFICATIONS:
More or less than ten primary flight rips, less than ten secondary flight tips,
and less than twelve or more than fourteen tail tips; any primary flight tips
from numbers five to ten show any other pigment than white; any white part-colored
primary flight tip between two solid colored primary flight tips on a solid
colored bird; disease or deformity of any kind; bull eye or any definite bread
in the line of the pupil (egg shape or tear drop); fraud; any missing portion of
a natural feather; pale beak or cere (woody beak or unnatural beak); in mottle
and marked classes the same disqualifications apply as in solid color except
that from numbers one to four of the primary and all of the secondary flight
tips will be allowed mixed colored feathers in their own classes (white frock
feathers allowed in Teagers); less than three-quarters inch beak measured from
the inside of beak, (inner lip) to tip of beak; in solid color classes any white
other than the socks, vent, belly, keel, legs, or wing coverts to epaulets; in
case of a moult of a feather, the feather must be through the quill in order to
distinguish color; missing frock feathers; young birds with mutilated bands must
be show as old birds; any bird showing less cap (crest) than width of head shall
be disqualified; any bird showing feather rot or so-called silkiness, on any
part of the body other than the secondary tips, from numbers nine to fourteen
shall be disqualified.
ALLOWANCES ON BEAK:
Any bird having a touch line of discoloration on upper and lower mandible and
still shows a good bloody red color in the clear portion of the beak shall be
allowed; any bird that has a little tarnish in the nostril but has a clear red
upper and lower mandible shall be allowed; the judge shall deduct points on
these birds as he sees fit. He can also deduct points on
his final decision for general appearance.
However, all points cannot be deducted from these birds.
DISQUALIFICATIONS ON BEAK:
Any bird that has complete discoloration on upper and lower mandible that goes
from tip of beak to nostril; any bird discolored completely on lower mandible,
from the tip of nostril and scratched mandible; any bird discolored completely
from tip of beak to nostril on lower mandible; deformed, woody, pale, and any
beak under three-quarters of an inch.
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