Touraine Goose
The Touraine goose, or oie de Touraine, is a regional French domestic goose from the Loire Valley around Tours. It belongs to the older farm-goose tradition of western and central France, where white geese were kept on grass, orchards, stubble fields, and farmyards for seasonal meat. The typical bird is medium to fairly large, white-feathered, and clean-looking, with an orange bill and legs. It is less familiar internationally than Toulouse or Embden, and in many places it is discussed as a heritage or local French breed rather than a common commercial strain.
Small flocks value Touraine geese for grazing ability and a table carcass suited to traditional roasting. They are managed much like other European utility geese: pasture through the growing season, grain or formulated feed when grass is short, and a dry, secure house at night. Because populations outside France can be small, breeders need to avoid repeated close matings and should be cautious about substituting generic white geese for real Touraine stock. Type, vigor, fertility, and good legs are more important than simply producing the largest possible bird.
Colors: Blue, Brown, Brown and White, Buff, Buff and White, Gray, Gray and White, Grey, Lavender, Pied, Saddleback, Splash, Tufted, White