Show Roller
BODY: Twenty Five Points
CONDITION: The bird should feel hard in your hand, with a
strong muscular body. Birds feeling fat and mushy should be considered out of
show condition and penalized accordingly. Birds with insufficient body should be
considered out of show condition and penalized accordingly.
STRUCTURE: The overall shape of the body should be that of a
wedge, starting with broad shoulders and a deep chest, ending with a tight,
narrow rump. The body should be sufficiently wedged shaped from front to rear so
that you feel the bird will slip right through your hand leaving you without
even a tail feather. When moving the hand under the keel from front to rear,
there should be one continuous unbroken contour with the keel ending as closely
to the end of the vent bones as possible. The keel structure should not tuck up
quickly into the body, thus creating a short, round shape, but should follow
through smoothly into the vent area with strong flesh throughout to maintain the
overall wedge shape. The keel bone itself should be smooth and straight; dents
and/or curves should be considered faults. Excessive openness and/or weak flesh
in the vent area is a serious fault and should be penalized accordingly.
HEAD AND NECK: Twenty Five Points
HEAD: The profile of the head should start off with a definite
break at the back of the wattle, with the front skull creating a 90-degree angle
with the centerline of the beak and eye. From here it should continue upward
slightly and then curve backward abruptly until it reaches its high point above
and just in front of the eye. The top line should then continue backward
abruptly until it reaches its high point above and just in front of the eye. The
top line should then continue backward in a long graceful curve creating length
to the back skull. The back skull should then drop off in an abrupt curve
flowing down and out into the neck creating a full cape ending at the bird’s
back. There should be no flat spots in the profile of the head. When viewing the
profile, the distance from the center of the eye to the end of the back skull
should be twice that as from the front skull to the center of the eye. Top skull
should not be lacking and should show sufficient height above the eye, but the
head should not give the impression of being round. While in show station and in
the hand, the bird will tuck its beak towards its chest; thereby, moving the
visual high point toward the end of the back skull. From the top view the head
should be wedge shaped, starting with a broad frontal and increasing in width as
it reaches the back skull, the sides should not be parallel. Also from the top
view the neck should be full in all directions. When viewed from the front the
face should develop immediately behind the beak, flaring outward to establish a
wide full face. When viewed from the front the wedge shape should be obvious.
Too narrow of a face or a “pinched” V-shaped face is a serious fault and
should be penalized accordingly. Also a face that is so wide as to prevent you
from seeing a portion of both eyes when viewed from straight on is a serious
fault and should be penalized accordingly. The head should be viewed in the hand
and in the judging coop; a head that loses shape and or size in the hand is a
serious fault and should be penalized accordingly.
NECK: The neck should join smoothly to the head and present a
full appearance with minimum under cut where the lower beak joins the neck. The
neckline should follow the profile without any sharp or sudden breaks to mar its
continuity. The neck should give a full, powerful appearance. The neck should be
short rather than long; but a neck less appearance in the cage should be
avoided. In the hand, a minimal amount of neck should be displayed at all times.
The neck should be smooth and free of any roughness of feather. Creases are a
serious fault and should be penalized accordingly.
BEAK: Any color is acceptable. The beak setting should be such
that when the line formed between the upper and lower mandibles is extended, it
passes through the center of the pupil. If the line were to pass under the eye,
the bird should be considered to too straight faced. Being straight faced or
down faced is a fault and should be penalized accordingly. The upper and lower
mandibles should be flush at the tip and should be of substance proportionate to
the bird. Too fine or too coarse of beak is a fault. The wattle should be such
an integral part of the beak in structure as to go unnoticed. Rough, fleshy
wattles are a serious fault and should be penalized accordingly. The throat line
should be clean with no signs of a gullet or feathers growing excessively
forward on the lower beak.
EYES: Any color eyes are acceptable but must be a matched pair.
Eyes should be bright and sparkling, exuding health. The pupils should be clear,
round in shape and centered in the eye. The overall shape of the eye should be
round. Excessive feathering around the eye, which gives the illusion of a sunken
eye or one that is oval in shape, is a serious fault and should be penalized
accordingly. The eye cere should be of a minimum. Fleshy and/or red eye ceres
are a serious fault and should be penalized accordingly. Birds with lines or
breaks in the pupil of the eye or odd eyes should be moved to the “Bad Eye”
class if one is available, otherwise they should be disqualified. Bull eyed and
dark eyed birds should not be penalized if lighting is inadequate to view the
pupils.
CONFORMATION: Twenty Five Points
SHELL: The outer shell of the total bird should depict a well
proportioned, balanced bird. The overall impression of the bird’s body should
be one of roundness, with a reverse “S” shape running from the front skull
through the tail. When viewed from a profile there should be ¾” of body
showing below the wing. The body should also be of sufficient depth from the
point where the neck meets the back to the point of the belly just in front of
and below the wing butt to lend itself to overall roundness. A bird that is flat
in the belly or gives a tubular appearance should be penalized accordingly.
RELAXED STATION: The natural station of the bird should be head
up and tail down, with a maximum of 1” clearance between the end of the tail
and the floor. A line drawn from the most forward point of the wing butt through
the end of the tail should maintain approximately a 30-degree angle with the
floor. A bird showing this line to be parallel has a serious fault and should be
penalized accordingly. A vertical line drawn through the eye down to the floor
should fall in the front half of the foot. The bird should remain in this
natural station whenever it is not being addressed by the judge.
SHOW STATION: The bird should exhibit a natural showing
ability, responding to the presence of the judge without much prompting. When
addressed by the judge, the bird should pick up its head accentuating the lines
and fullness of its head and neck and move its head back so that the eye is now
over the ball of the leading foot. In doing this, its chest should also raise
slightly causing its tail to drop closer to the floor. The bird should not
“hinge” or break at its rump; this is a serious fault and should be
penalized accordingly. Slight contact with the floor is not a fault, but pushing
the tail into the floor and/or excessive fanning of the tail is a serious fault
and should be penalized accordingly.
LEGS: Legs should be sturdy, short and bent at a 60-degree
angle. There should be a distance of not more than ¾” for cocks and ½” for
hens from the floor to the bottom of the body. Straight legs and/or long legs
are a serious fault and should be penalized accordingly. The legs and feet
should be clean, free of feathers, with a minimum of toenail.
WINGS: The wings should be tightly folded against the body and
appear integral with it. They should rest upon the tail, with the flights ending
5/8” back from its tip when judged in hand. No feather should extend below the
lower line of the primaries. The wing butts should blend in smoothly with the
front of the chest. Each wing shall have ten secondary flights and ten primary
flights. When the wing is extended the ends of the flights should form a convex
curve. Each of the flights should overlap its adjacent flight throughout its
entire length, with the exception of the three outside primaries, which will
show gaps between their ends. The flights should be side. Narrow and/or weak
quilled flights are serious faults and should be penalized accordingly.
RUMP: The rump should be strong and narrow and conform to the
general wedge shape and symmetry of the body and tail. The body, rump and tail
should taper into the width of one tail feather. Wide rumps are a serious fault
and should be penalized accordingly.
TAIL: The tail should be comprised of twelve feathers, strong
in quill, tightly packed in strong support feathers and extending in a one
feather width 5/8” past the wing tips. The tail should be at its narrowest
approximately ¼ of its length from the tip, forming what is commonly called
“spoon” tail. A tail with less than twelve feathers should be compared to
the overall natural molt and given consideration. A tail with more than twelve
feathers is a disqualification.
SIZE: The height should be 8” from the floor to the top of
the head for cocks and 7-1/2” for hens. The length should be 10-1/2” from
the chest to the tip of the tail for cocks and 9-1/2” for hens. The width,
when measured in a relaxed standing position should be 4-3/4” for cocks and
4-1/2” for hens. Weight for a bird in show condition should be 14 to 17 ounces
for old cocks, 13 to 16 ounces for young cocks, 13 to 15 ½ ounces for old hens
and 12 to 14-1/2 ounces for young hens. A bird of any given age/sex group that
is over the upper limit for that group is too fat or too large. A bird below the
lower limit is too thin or too small. Both cases are serious faults and should
be penalized accordingly.
EXPRESSION: Expression is those attributes of the bird, which
give it a very captivating presence in the show pen. Attributes such as eye and
beak color combined with markings that give a bird that certain flash.
Expression may also be seen in the way a bird presents itself in the judging
cage, such as a hen being especially flirtatious or a cock flexing his
masculinity, making it very noticeable to an audience. Expression is not
necessarily something you can touch; it is more of an overall appeal to your
senses.
DISPOSITION: The bird must be calm; definitely not wild or
afraid. It may respond to the judge with a bluff and display, but an extreme
aggressive nature is not desired. Wing slapping is not a fault unless it
interferes with the judges attempt to view the bird. The bird’s reaction
should be appropriate for its sex; the cock should exude masculinity and the hen
femininity. The hen may either become flirtatious or establish her territory
with a broody threat display. The cock should acknowledge the judge’s presence
in a more aloof, disdainful manner; elevating his neck and chest slightly and
swelling himself up in a threat display.
FEATHER: Twenty Five Points
GENERAL: The entire bird from head to tail should be in perfect
molt, creating a firm, smooth coat of feathers with a sheen and texture that
reflects health, strength and maturity. There should be a minimum of looseness
of feathers under the rump. The feather structure must be strong in quill,
springy and of sufficient length to cover the bird. If the bird has not
completed its molt, the time of year and the birds overall condition should be
taken into consideration.
COVER: The bird’s back should be completely covered with wide
secondary feathers so that none of the back area is exposed.
CONDITION: The bird should be clean and free of parasites.
There should not be any evidence of parasites such as mite/lice holes. Such
feather damage is a serious fault and should be penalized accordingly. The
presence of parasites (lice and/or mites etc.) on a bird is a disqualification
and the bird should be removed from the show.