We have some Carlisle OEG Gingers AengusOg and they are MEAN!!! They are amazing broodies too! Great birds! I dont think iv ever come across anything like them before, temperment wise, without an egg or chick in sight they will happily have a go at my passing terriers for the fun of it, an thats just the hens
True game birds!!!
Are you sure they are Carlisle game? I've never heard of Gingers in the Carlisle form.
I had written a screed about this, but for some reason it failed to post, so here is the short version..............I'm sure you'll all be glad to hear that.

After the demise of cockfighting, some fanciers set about breeding strains of gamefowl for the show pen.
They succeeded in breeding away from a well-balanced, close-heeled, active, fiesty, broad-breasted, natural athlete, with a belligerent nature, to an ill-balanced, sluggish, cowardly, pigeon-chested, wide-stanced lump of a thing with no stomach for a fight of any duration. It didn't take them long to do that. These breeders also became overly fixated on colour, so that the birds quickly became readily identifiable on their plumage if not on their type.
Many of the old colours associated with the genuine Oxford gamefowl became less favoured, ginger being one of them, and the new breeds were represented by fewer colours, such as black red, grey, black, blue (dun), pile, and brown red, with a few crele here and there. Such was the craze to get the colour right that the conformation and constitution of the fowl deteriorated rapidly, along with any remaining gameness.
A few Oxford enthusiasts kept some of the old strains going and, in places such as Ireland, and certain areas of England, America, and Australia, there are still strong strains of fowl which are relatively unchanged from the days of cockfighting. These are now rare breeds, kept by very few people, and quite difficult to get hold of.
I have Oxford gingers here, as well as some other strains of gamefowl derived from Oxford and Irish base stock. I breed them carefully for the original attributes of the breed. All my birds are developed from a few trios of good stock, which I was very lucky to obtain some years ago.
So, danniellestocks, I think you may be luckier than you think. It sounds like you may have Oxford gingers there. It would be interesting to see how they compare to mine.