Sunday, June 9, 2013

China Game Fowl

               
                                                A China Game rooster


The fowl known in the US as "China Game" originated in the tropical Hainan Province of Southern China. Though they now exist throughout China. Hainan is a Chinese word meaning "South of the Sea." Hainan Province has 97% of its land mass on Hainan Island, "Hainan Dao." The remaining 3% of its land mass is scattered across some two hundred smaller islands in the region. Hainan first appears in written history ca. 110 BC. Its first inhabitants are estimated to have arrived there some 3,000 years ago. It is not known how long the fowl have been bred there.
The fowl are referred to properly as "Hainan Fowl." However, individuals in many rural populations refer to them simply as "tail fighters." Their physical appearance and occasional mutations suggest they have Green Jungle Fowl from Java in their ancestry. Aside from the long tail feathers of the rooster, pea-combed birds having one centrally located wattle and rounded neck feathers are known to exist within the flocks of older, long-time breeders. This suggests that southern China had trade with Java, Indonesia, prior to the 7th century AD.
Black-breasted Red is the most common plumage color pattern. Silver and Gold Dwucking are also known to exist, as well as Black-tailed Red Ginger. Leg colors are green and yellow, varying even within the same flock.
Corn is an expensive commodity that is not readily available. Brown rice itself is not necessarily fed to the fowl either, due to its demand as a staple of the human diet. So only the byproducts of brown rice, fruit, and vegetables are fed to the fowl. Hainan Island is a typhoon prone location. Debris from the sea often washes up on the beaches. Dead fish, crustaceans, and sea weed are commonly collected from the beaches and fed to livestock, including the Hainan Fowl.
Despite this diet of rice byproducts and sea refuse, it seems the fowl do well in the US living on other grains. This is in stark contrast to other fowl such as non-molting long-tail fowl that have a similar diet in their native country of Japan and do best maintained on such a diet.
The fowl were fought sometimes ceremoniously at specific times of the year. It's said that they would not fight during the winter months and were used mostly during the spring and summer months during breeding season when the roosters were already prone to fighting.
Today the fowl are still used in this manner in rural villages in China. Elsewhere outside of China they are kept as pets and ornamental fowl.

4 comments:

  1. SIR . The china game fowl are a beautiful game fowl. But they are very hard to find, because I have tried and no luck. I am still looking for some one that breeds them and that can sell me some.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Sir can any one help me locate a person who breed the china game fowl or that sell them or auction them off. thank you for the help any one.

    ReplyDelete
  3. CHINA GAME FOWL-if you know who has them please email. manb514@gmail.com

    ReplyDelete
  4. Does anyone answer back on this site? I am looking for breeders of the china game fowl that's all I want. thank you.

    ReplyDelete