Chorrera
Chorrera is an obscure domestic pigeon name, usually understood in Spanish-speaking fancy-pigeon circles as referring to a bird with a visible breast frill or jabot. Like all domestic pigeons it comes from the rock pigeon, Columba livia, but the label is less standardized internationally than names such as Chinese owl or Jacobin. Depending on the source, Chorrera birds may be treated as a local variety, a descriptive type, or a small regional breed, with ordinary pigeon colors appearing in different lofts.
Practical evaluation should start with the actual birds rather than the name. A healthy Chorrera-type pigeon should have clear eyes, free breathing, balanced body shape, and feather ornament that does not interfere with feeding, mating, or rearing young. Keepers use standard fancy-pigeon housing: dry lofts, clean nest spaces, grit, and a measured grain mix. Anyone buying stock should ask which standard the breeder follows and whether the line is selected for show frill, flying ability, or local tradition.
Colors: Almond, Ash Red, Bar, Barless, Black, Blue, Brown, Checker, Dilute, Dun, Grizzle, Indigo, Mottle, Opal, Pied, Recessive Red, Red, Silver, Splash, Spread, White, Yellow