Rung Goose
The Rung goose is an uncommon domestic goose label, likely best understood as a locally named strain or regional farm type unless a specific registry source is available. Labels like this often travel through breed lists with limited description, while the actual birds may be ordinary domestic geese selected within a particular village, farm network, or conservation inventory. Color can vary, so the name and source history matter more than a single plumage pattern.
Care and stewardship should be practical and evidence-led. Keepers should avoid presenting Rung geese as a highly fixed international breed unless their flock has documentation to support that claim. The useful work is to record where the birds came from, how they breed, what body type they show, and whether their traits remain stable over generations. Housing, pasture, clean water, and predator protection follow normal domestic goose requirements, with extra attention to keeping the line separate during breeding.
Colors: Blue, Brown, Brown and White, Buff, Buff and White, Gray, Gray and White, Grey, Lavender, Pied, Saddleback, Splash, Tufted, White