Bavarian Landrace
The Bavarian landrace is a traditional German farm goose associated with Bavaria and nearby rural regions, where geese were selected for grazing ability, seasonal meat, eggs, and resilience rather than tight exhibition uniformity. It is usually treated as a greylag-derived domestic goose, with flock variation in size and plumage. Grey, white, pied, saddleback, blue-toned, or splash-patterned birds may appear depending on the line, which is typical of landrace populations.
In home and conservation flocks, Bavarian landrace geese work best as active pasture birds with secure housing and enough room to avoid muddy, crowded runs. People seeking them for heritage breeding should ask how the line has been maintained and whether unrelated birds are available nearby. Stewardship means preserving useful variation while selecting away from weak legs, poor fertility, and nervous temperaments; local exchanges can matter as much as show-ring appearance.
Colors: Blue, Brown, Brown and White, Buff, Buff and White, Gray, Gray and White, Grey, Lavender, Pied, Saddleback, Splash, Tufted, White