Spalding
Spalding peafowl are hybrid peafowl developed from Indian blue peafowl crossed with green peafowl, producing birds that may carry the size, upright carriage, tighter crest, and green-toned necking associated with green peafowl ancestry. The name is used widely in aviculture, but it does not identify one fixed percentage or one uniform look. Some Spaldings are only lightly influenced, while others are bred for a much stronger green peafowl type.
Good Spalding management starts with space, records, and realistic expectations. These birds are large, vocal, and long-lived, with males needing room for full train display and hens needing quiet nest areas during breeding season. Because green peafowl ancestry can be sensitive in conservation conversations, breeders should describe birds as avicultural hybrids and document lineage when possible, especially when selling breeding stock or comparing color patterns such as pied, white-eyed, or barred-wing.
Colors: Barred‑Wing, Black‑Shoulder, Pied, Silver Pied, White‑Eyed