Hello all. I don't want to buy chicks , raise them to maturity , slaughter and freeze them, then start all over again. It seems I'm going to need one coop for breeding stock, ( hens and a rooster), another coop for egg laying( hens, no rooster,) and a third coop for all the male chicks hatched to live in till they are old enough to harvest. That is A LOT of coops and space! How do I manage this flock? I don't want male chicks growing into roosters and fighting all over the place, and while meat production is my primary goal, it would be nice to have fresh eggs , at least a few a week...without finding a baby chick in the egg! I appreciate the advice ! MiF
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You need two coops, an incubator, and a brooder.
One coop for the roos you are raising for meat, another for the rest of your hens and breeding roo. There is no reason your breeding stock and egg stock can't be the same stock. If your roo has access to all your hens, assume every egg is fertile. Collect all your eggs, and eat as many as you like. When it comes time to think about incubating a new flock, then start setting egg aside for incubation. Embryos will not develop unless the egg is incubated, so as long as you collect your eggs daily, even with broody hens, you won't get a single embryo.
What breed are you thinking of using? There are a lot of dual purpose birds that both lay well and provide a good amount of meat. Wyandottes spring to mind.
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"It is a sometimes appropriate response to reality to go insane." Philip K Dick
Pets: Two Frustrating Little Daughters, One Roller Derby Grrl Wife, 1 3/4 dogs, 2 Spazzy Cats, 4 ridiculous Chickens(RIR, Australorp, EE, and Wellsumer), and 2 Beehives!
"Properly read, the Bible is the most potent force for atheism ever invented." Isaac Asimov
Oh , that is a relief ! I assumed a fertilized egg had a chick in it in very short order! I have just sold my wife and daughter on the idea of raising chickens, I would lose them immediately if I cracked an egg into the skillet for cooking and in plopped a little chick ! Yuck! Ha,ha! I am pretty much set on the Dark Cornish breed as meat birds. I'm not really big on eggs, but a few a week would be good. From what I have read, the Dark Cornish are excellent foragers, and the hens make good mothers. I have been given an egg incubator, I don't know how to use it, but I have one. I was really hoping the hens would do all that mothering stuff...keep it natural, y'know. MiF
- Location: Granite Falls, WA
- Joined: 3/2010
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Wife to a loving Husband, one 4 year old daughter, one boxer,and one cat. 4 silkies 2 EE's 1 Barred rock. Just added 4 Cockoo Marans.
http://dragcave.net/user/Breshcandra
http://dragcave.net/user/meow-Meow
Wife to a loving Husband, one 4 year old daughter, one boxer,and one cat. 4 silkies 2 EE's 1 Barred rock. Just added 4 Cockoo Marans.
http://dragcave.net/user/Breshcandra
http://dragcave.net/user/meow-Meow
- Location: Fowler, OH (I gotta own fowl here, right?)
- Joined: 2/2012
- Posts: 103
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Javas are a great dual purpose breed, who forage really well. They're a little harder to find, but even some of the hatcheries sell them. They were considered the top meat bird in this country at one time and they lay eggs pretty well too. You can always let a broody hen or two incubate for you (I would be too lazy to use an incubator) in a broody box in your coop and just pick up all the other eggs. Right now I'm planning on keeping an assortment of hens only, but if we eventually try to go "self-sustaining" with our flock, I think we would go with Javas.
Check out the chart at this link: http://www.ithaca.edu/staff/jhenderson/chooks/chooks.html
I don't think Silkies would be the best option as a meat bird.
Owner of: 1 Great Dane, 1 Yellow Lab, 2 house cats, 4 barn cats, 4 horses, 2 calves, 21 chickens, and 1 very patient husband
By day we are both family nurse practitioners. By night we run Nutwood Farms in NE Ohio, a small hobby farm and horse boarding facility.
Expecting our first, long-awaited child in December 2012!!!!!
Owner of: 1 Great Dane, 1 Yellow Lab, 2 house cats, 4 barn cats, 4 horses, 2 calves, 21 chickens, and 1 very patient husband
By day we are both family nurse practitioners. By night we run Nutwood Farms in NE Ohio, a small hobby farm and horse boarding facility.
Expecting our first, long-awaited child in December 2012!!!!!
I LOVE my Javas. They are dependable layers, spunky, as well as excellent broodies/mamas.
"so much depends upon a red wheel barrow glazed with rain water beside the white chickens." ~William Carlos Williams
"so much depends upon a red wheel barrow glazed with rain water beside the white chickens." ~William Carlos Williams
- Location: Granite Falls, WA
- Joined: 3/2010
- Posts: 1,040
- offline
Wife to a loving Husband, one 4 year old daughter, one boxer,and one cat. 4 silkies 2 EE's 1 Barred rock. Just added 4 Cockoo Marans.
http://dragcave.net/user/Breshcandra
http://dragcave.net/user/meow-Meow
Wife to a loving Husband, one 4 year old daughter, one boxer,and one cat. 4 silkies 2 EE's 1 Barred rock. Just added 4 Cockoo Marans.
http://dragcave.net/user/Breshcandra
http://dragcave.net/user/meow-Meow
Actually, Black Javas were my first choice. I wanted them not only because of their foraging abilities, I also wanted to help preserve a rare, historic breed. The only reason I gave up on Javas was I could not find any! I would LOVE to raise Javas,any advice on where to buy them? MiF
- Location: Fowler, OH (I gotta own fowl here, right?)
- Joined: 2/2012
- Posts: 103
- offline

Actually, Black Javas were my first choice. I wanted them not only because of their foraging abilities, I also wanted to help preserve a rare, historic breed. The only reason I gave up on Javas was I could not find any! I would LOVE to raise Javas,any advice on where to buy them? MiF
Yeah!!! Those are the reasons I want them too. I have a feeling I'll have a Java only flock someday, but since I'm just starting out, I wanted to try a few different breeds. I wasn't able to find the black ones, but I found the mottled from a few different places.
I'm getting some next month from www.thefancychick.com. They aren't the cheapest, but they had all of the breeds I wanted so it made it cheaper to order from one place. It is a small farm, so they hatch to order.
I think you can usually get them from www.mypetchicken.com, but I think they are out of them right now.
I also found them on www.welphatchery.com.
Hope that helps!
Sarah
Owner of: 1 Great Dane, 1 Yellow Lab, 2 house cats, 4 barn cats, 4 horses, 2 calves, 21 chickens, and 1 very patient husband
By day we are both family nurse practitioners. By night we run Nutwood Farms in NE Ohio, a small hobby farm and horse boarding facility.
Expecting our first, long-awaited child in December 2012!!!!!
Owner of: 1 Great Dane, 1 Yellow Lab, 2 house cats, 4 barn cats, 4 horses, 2 calves, 21 chickens, and 1 very patient husband
By day we are both family nurse practitioners. By night we run Nutwood Farms in NE Ohio, a small hobby farm and horse boarding facility.
Expecting our first, long-awaited child in December 2012!!!!!
- Creating a self sustaining flock
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