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At the request of a member, we need a section for clearwings. Please post your clearwing pictures here.

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a pair of green claerwings

2871698420104244332S600x600Q85.jpg

a pair of blue clearwings

2041602200104244332S600x600Q85.jpg

a green clearwing hen

2077326090104244332S600x600Q85.jpg

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I am looking for a picture of a grey clearwing and a greygreen clearwing. Anyone have any like that?

 

Nubbly5, you quite a few. Any pics so i can see?

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These are some of the clearwings I bought off Nubbly and had sent over from Perth. Some time after I decided not to travel down this long road and decided not to breed clearwings. I sold them to Renee, who lives in Perth, so they flew back to Perth. Here are some pics.

 

P1010001-1.jpg

P1010003-1.jpg

P1010003.jpg

P1010006.jpg

P1010007.jpg

P1010002-1.jpg

P1010004.jpg

 

The one that looks like she is moulting was actually plucked as a youngster. Shame as she has the clearest wings and is a bit bigger than her peers, or at least she was - :)

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clearwings001.jpg

 

Spot the ring in! A light green cinnamon/bes.

clearwings002.jpg

 

clearwings003.jpg

 

Easier to spot the ring in in this picture. A bes hen top right. Bottom left is as close as I've got to a grey I'm afraid Dave - a mauve clearwing.

clearwings052.jpg

 

Top left is a normal light green/clearwing rest all clearwings.

clearwings072.jpg

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Nice clear wings Nubbly

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Looks like you should be called clearwing instead of me. Some lovely variety clearwings there. Isn't it interesting when you add the dark factor the wing markings tend to be darker also. At the moment all my clearwings are blue series but I must admit a good green with contrasting yellow wing is a sight to behold, I'll have a play arround tomorrow weather permitting and see if I can post some also Cheers Clearwing

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Hi these birds are Clearwings birds not mine. I don't have any clearwings yet

clearwingcropped.jpg

clearwing.jpg

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Here are some 'happy snaps' of some of the Clearwings I have bred this past year. Unbeknownst to me, my camera decided to co-operate so they are in focus! :lol:

 

The larger hens (2 red rungers, a sky and cobalt) are from a pairing I did quite early on in my breeding season from a Sky Clearwing (from Nubbly) and Normal Cobalt split Dilute (Jeff Lloyd). As a result their wing markings are darker but so too is their body color, quite vibrant in fact. B)

 

Cobalt (fuzziness makes her wing markings look even darker :rolleyes: )

P1010352.jpg

 

P1010347.jpg

 

Sky (sorry flash went off)

P1010342.jpg

 

(between Light green clearwing and opaline pied)

P1010323-2.jpg

 

Then are the 2 Clearwings or more likely Dilutes (blue rungers) from a Dilute (I bred) x Sky Clearwing or Dilute (Gearing), a Sky and Grey.

 

(either side of rec pied hen)

P1010343.jpg

 

The rest are all (blue rungers) from Nubbly x Gearing pairings.

 

(a couple of Green boys)

P1010345.jpg

 

(Cobalt Violet hen next to DF Yellow)

P1010348.jpg

 

(some more Green and Blue series)

P1010324-2.jpg

 

(more Green series and one or two Cobalts on the ground, yes - if you look closely you can see which ones :) )

P1010353.jpg

Edited by renee
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Hi Renee, nice, you have some very good clearwings with good contrast between wing and body colour, keep up the good work. Clearwing

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Nice Renee clearwings :rolleyes:

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Hi Renee, nice, you have some very good clearwings with good contrast between wing and body colour, keep up the good work. Clearwing

Thank you Clearwing! :rolleyes: I was lucky to start off with very good stock, the trick now is not to mess it all up! :lol: ... and hopefully improve over time. :)

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Hi Renee, nice, you have some very good clearwings with good contrast between wing and body colour, keep up the good work. Clearwing

Thank you Clearwing! :rolleyes: I was lucky to start off with very good stock, the trick now is not to mess it all up! :lol: ... and hopefully improve over time. :)

 

 

I believe you are on the right track using dilute, I mentioned in another thread thats how I bred my best clearwings ever, a word or warning, check length of secondaries very carefully. Many breeders fail to pick up long secondaries on a single coloured wing, but the judges will not. Clearwing

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I believe you are on the right track using dilute, I mentioned in another thread thats how I bred my best clearwings ever, a word or warning, check length of secondaries very carefully. Many breeders fail to pick up long secondaries on a single coloured wing, but the judges will not. Clearwing

I am afraid I am not experienced enough to know exactly what you mean, are you referring to the 2 dilutes which do have long flights?

P1010343.jpg

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Not referring to any of your birds, just giving you a heads up, as it has been my experience that many people start with clearwings and in an effort to increase size and head they mate them to some large rough birds. The result of which is the clearwings end up with long secondaries, the breeders don't notice untill the judge points it out. Clearwings are a beautiful, frustrating,rewarding,maddening variety to breed, but I love them hence my name. Although I'm better known for Normanls, Opalines and Cinnamons. Clearwing

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Not referring to any of your birds, just giving you a heads up, as it has been my experience that many people start with clearwings and in an effort to increase size and head they mate them to some large rough birds. The result of which is the clearwings end up with long secondaries, the breeders don't notice untill the judge points it out. Clearwings are a beautiful, frustrating,rewarding,maddening variety to breed, but I love them hence my name. Although I'm better known for Normanls, Opalines and Cinnamons. Clearwing

Thank you for the advice! :rolleyes:

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thanks for the tip clearwing any more :rolleyes:

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Feel free to PM me with any questions.

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Hi these birds are Clearwings birds not mine. I don't have any clearwings yet

clearwingcropped.jpg

clearwing.jpg

Nice size clearwings CW :)

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Not referring to any of your birds, just giving you a heads up, as it has been my experience that many people start with clearwings and in an effort to increase size and head they mate them to some large rough birds. The result of which is the clearwings end up with long secondaries, the breeders don't notice untill the judge points it out. Clearwings are a beautiful, frustrating,rewarding,maddening variety to breed, but I love them hence my name. Although I'm better known for Normanls, Opalines and Cinnamons. Clearwing

Saw the darkwing DVD that Don Burke and Mario put out to ANBC and in it he commented that he had "cracked" the long flighted gene and not to be scared to use it when improving stock. Can't say I was overly convinced though but to test out his theory I will be using a couple heavy flighted birds this year instead of culling them out of my stud. I think I have a copy of the article he wrote on it too so I might post it up with permission.

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Saw the darkwing DVD that Don Burke and Mario put out to ANBC and in it he commented that he had "cracked" the long flighted gene and not to be scared to use it when improving stock. Can't say I was overly convinced though but to test out his theory I will be using a couple heavy flighted birds this year instead of culling them out of my stud. I think I have a copy of the article he wrote on it too so I might post it up with permission.

Yes PLEASE! :)

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Not referring to any of your birds, just giving you a heads up, as it has been my experience that many people start with clearwings and in an effort to increase size and head they mate them to some large rough birds. The result of which is the clearwings end up with long secondaries, the breeders don't notice untill the judge points it out. Clearwings are a beautiful, frustrating,rewarding,maddening variety to breed, but I love them hence my name. Although I'm better known for Normanls, Opalines and Cinnamons. Clearwing

Saw the darkwing DVD that Don Burke and Mario put out to ANBC and in it he commented that he had "cracked" the long flighted gene and not to be scared to use it when improving stock. Can't say I was overly convinced though but to test out his theory I will be using a couple heavy flighted birds this year instead of culling them out of my stud. I think I have a copy of the article he wrote on it too so I might post it up with permission.

 

Interesting, when the longflight first appaered in Australia, we were told by "our" so called experts to cull them out, never to breed with them. When they appeared in England however, they did breed with them and produced what we call the Exhibition Budgerigar of today. But the way I look at it is those lovely English breeders have already done the work for me, there are plenty of large, big headed, short winged birds I can use, so I don't need the longflights. Clearwing

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Yeah clearwing, I'm not totally convinced that the heavy secondaries and the true long flights are the same thing. When I very first started I bought a longflighted bird from one of the breeders here in WA. He said it was the only one he had seen for a long time and it's the only one I've seen since - I soooooooo wish I had thought to take a few snaps of it as it was completely different to the sloppy secondaries that often show up in clearwings (and by the looks of it darkwings) when you try and improve them.

 

This fellow had very definite long flights - primaries and secondaries - and also a longer tail. It's wings were still neat but the flights were completely out of proportion. It also had better feather that the rest of my flock too whereas these sloppy flighted clearwings don't tend to be much of an improvement in the overall feathering, just sloppy big secondaries.

 

Still Don Burke in the DVD says he has "cracked" the long flighted birds genetically and the birds he is talking about in the dvd are quite obviously the same sloppy secondaries that I think you are talking about in the clearwings.

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Yeah clearwing, I'm not totally convinced that the heavy secondaries and the true long flights are the same thing. When I very first started I bought a longflighted bird from one of the breeders here in WA. He said it was the only one he had seen for a long time and it's the only one I've seen since - I soooooooo wish I had thought to take a few snaps of it as it was completely different to the sloppy secondaries that often show up in clearwings (and by the looks of it darkwings) when you try and improve them.

 

This fellow had very definite long flights - primaries and secondaries - and also a longer tail. It's wings were still neat but the flights were completely out of proportion. It also had better feather that the rest of my flock too whereas these sloppy flighted clearwings don't tend to be much of an improvement in the overall feathering, just sloppy big secondaries.

 

Still Don Burke in the DVD says he has "cracked" the long flighted birds genetically and the birds he is talking about in the dvd are quite obviously the same sloppy secondaries that I think you are talking about in the clearwings.

 

 

How do you breed your clearwings Nubbly5? As I have said my preferred outcross is Dilute failing that a good Normal or Opaline. In the photos Splat posted for me you'll see a clearwing cobalt cock sitting next to a dilute. That dilute will be mated to the clearwings Violet sister. Cheer Clearwing

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do you put opaline with your clearwings clearwing thank's shannon

Edited by shannon bird breeder
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