Belgian Bearded DAnver Bantams




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The minimum on Belgian D'anver BANTAMS is is 20 per assortment. The price is for 20 chicks per assortment. This year we are not taking orders for specific colors.

Assorted Common can include quail, blue quail, black, blue, and splash.

Assorted Rare can include hatchery choice of cuckoo, mottled, white, millies, porcelains, and lavender.

Assorted Very Rare can include hatchery choice of silver quail, dun cuckoo, blue cuckoo, lavender cuckoo,bb red, ginger red, and buff columbian.

Assorted from Any can include hatchery choice of any of the above colors.

The colors not above are not available at this time.

The American Bantam Association Bantam Standard recognizes Black Belgian Bearded d' Anver Bantams, Black Breasted Red Belgian Bearded d' Anver Bantams, Blue, Blue Quail, Buff, Buff Columbian, Columbian, Cuckoo, Millie Fleur, Mottled, Porcelain, Quail, Self Blue, and White.

British Standards also recognize Blue Mottled, Partridge, Silver, Gold, and Spangled.

Belgian Bearded d'Anvers are known as Barbu d'Anvers in Belgium and is probably the oldest of miniature breeds. It is believed that it originated in Anvers, Belgium. The earliest pictured bantams painted by the Dutch artist Albert Cuyp, who lived from 1620 till 1691. On one painting he pictured some small sized birds heavily bearded, clean legged and showing the gait of Antwerp Bearded bantams , and more or less the color markings of the present day Quail Antwerp Bearded bantams. These bantams were no doubt the forerunners for the fairly small Bearded Antwerp. Martin (1949) gives his impressions of Belgian Bearded d'Anvers on the basis of spending one year in Antwerp during World War II. "Due to the shortage of feed the

Belgian Bearded d' Anver Club Of America
The Belgian dÆ Anver Club is the breed of the future. Antwerp Belgian were recognized by the A.P.A. in 1949. The National Antwerp Belgian Society was organized Sept. 1, 1961 in Durham, North Carolina. In 1965 the word National was dropped from our name. Antwerp Belgians Society Thereafter the Name "Society" was dropped and the word Antwerp removed. Although the breed is still known in Germany and England as Antwerp Belgians our first standard admitted them as Antwerp Belgians, we now call them d'Anvers. The name "anver" is a section in Belgian which claims the origin of our breed. Around 1970 the newly named Belgian d'Anver Club started districts throughout the United States. As of this day we have 15 districts and around 90+ members. One of the True bantams, meaning there is no standard bird of the same type. Three or four newsletters put out per year. One National Meet per year. One Semi-Annual Meet per year. District, State and Special Meets also placed throughout the country

References: Bantam Chickens by Fred Jeffery, Bantam Standard of Perfection by American Bantam Association, Bantams Intriguing Miniatures by John Skinner, APA Standard of Perfection by American Poultry Association



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