Schweizer
The Schweizer, more fully Schweizerhuhn or Swiss chicken, is a Swiss dual-purpose breed developed in the early twentieth century for farms that wanted a hardy white fowl for both eggs and table birds. Traditional Schweizer chickens are solid white with red face furnishings, clean legs, a deep body, and a low rose comb that suits cold, damp Alpine weather better than a tall single comb. They were once a practical farm breed before specialized hybrids displaced many local chickens, and conservation groups in Switzerland have helped keep the breed visible.
Schweizer flocks are usually kept by heritage breeders, smallholders, and educational farms rather than large egg businesses. They need ordinary chicken housing, but their strengths show in free-range or semi-free-range systems where moderate growth, steady laying, and calm flock behavior matter. Keepers comparing them with commercial layers should expect fewer eggs and slower finishing, balanced by breed character and resilience. For breeding, the white plumage, rose comb, body depth, fertility, and absence of off-type birds are more important than pushing for maximum production.
Colors: Barred, Birchen, Black, Blue, Brown, Buff, Columbian, Crele, Cuckoo, Duckwing, Gold, Gold Laced, Laced, Lavender, Mille Fleur, Mottled, Partridge, Penciled, Porcelain, Red, Silver, Silver Laced, Spangled, Splash, Wheaten, White