Emden Goose
The Emden goose is the same north German breed more often spelled Embden in English-language poultry books and shows. The name points to Emden in Lower Saxony, a port city linked with the development and trade of large white geese. A typical Emden is tall, deep-bodied, and pure white, with an orange bill and legs and a longer, cleaner outline than many compact farm geese. It has been used as a table goose, a crossing bird for meat production, and an exhibition breed where size and carriage are important.
Anyone buying Emden geese should check which spelling and standard a breeder follows, since registry expectations vary and generic white geese are easy to confuse with the breed. The birds need generous space, sturdy fencing, and a grazing routine that prevents heavy adults from becoming overfat. Clean bathing water is especially useful during breeding because large geese mate more successfully when they can use water. For small farms, the Emden's advantages are growth and imposing presence; the tradeoff is feed demand, noise, and assertive seasonal behavior.
Colors: Blue, Brown, Brown and White, Buff, Buff and White, Gray, Gray and White, Grey, Lavender, Pied, Saddleback, Splash, Tufted, White