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Fauna curiosities of our forests
The Slope Chicken
Slope Chicken at Regional Museum
In the notes of Johann August Großkopff, hunter on duty for the "Princely Saxonian Coburg-Saalfeldschen Reichmannsdorfer forest", written in 1753, you can read: " The big wood howler or slope chicken is one of the tallest among the inhabitant Wals-birds or venisons in Germany, second only to the rooster of the open fields.
Similar sized like the welsh or Calectucian rooster his color is mixed of grey, black, white and brown feathers and he has got a crest and a cling of red color under his bended beak. Very curious are its feet of different sizes, matching perfectly the demands of the downhill inclined slopes." ( The oldest notice commenting the slope chicken.) Surviving in slope areas caused in periods of time this unique curiosity in the fauna: the short slope foot and the more than the third part longer supporting leg stabilizing standing and balance of this woodhowler.
After the mating season in early spring the chicken starts to build the nest collecting feathers, different sorts of grass and moss, prefering sunny and rocky slopes.
The 5 - 8 gnomebird-like, ocher- colored eggs, laid down with soft stings, are closed in the eggskin opposite the lay-down direction and will dry in the nest similar like a chestnut shell with thorns showing a solidness like the shell of a beetle in order to keep away nest robbers and protecting the eggs from rolling out of the very flat nest.
Slope Chicken at Regional Museum