I live in a suburb of a major city with a back yard that is just over 100 feet long. My house is about 20 feet away from my neighbors house. Two streets over and the lawns are all postage stamps. Even just across the street the back yards are half the length. I am a back yard chicken keeper in every way.
A rooster is a bad thing to have within 125 feet of your neighbors house. Raising it out to a good size often means waiting until it starts crowing... I suppose I could learn to caponize, but that can have some really high losses and is a delicate procedure. Most of the neighborhoods around here it is even illegal to have roosters at all, regardless of noise levels. How is that ideal for my back yard? Roosters need more feed, which can in a LARGE space could be deferred by free ranging. That is great... If you live in the country. It is kinds poop in regards to a small or even large back yard.
I raised a group of CXs this year. The hens got big and meaty, and the roosters reached a nice weight before they could start crowing. My CXs would RUN at me every day and would flap their wings to make sure they moved faster. They were tractored as chicks and their tractor had branches in it so they could roost, something they gladly did. The tractors were three feet high and the chickens would FLY out of the tractor when they were little and never.lost the ability to escape the tractor if he door was open.
I kept some of my hens around for 16 weeks with no problems. They spent their life on real ground, eating real grass and they have been delicious so far. Nice, firm meat that was deep yellow skinned and much darker than grocery meat. My dark meat was actually red instead of grey.
I cannot imagine how a rooster crowing and eating through your feed and possibly getting you fined by the city and making your neighbors hate you is better than raising efficient, active and quiet birds.
A rooster is a bad thing to have within 125 feet of your neighbors house. Raising it out to a good size often means waiting until it starts crowing... I suppose I could learn to caponize, but that can have some really high losses and is a delicate procedure. Most of the neighborhoods around here it is even illegal to have roosters at all, regardless of noise levels. How is that ideal for my back yard? Roosters need more feed, which can in a LARGE space could be deferred by free ranging. That is great... If you live in the country. It is kinds poop in regards to a small or even large back yard.
I raised a group of CXs this year. The hens got big and meaty, and the roosters reached a nice weight before they could start crowing. My CXs would RUN at me every day and would flap their wings to make sure they moved faster. They were tractored as chicks and their tractor had branches in it so they could roost, something they gladly did. The tractors were three feet high and the chickens would FLY out of the tractor when they were little and never.lost the ability to escape the tractor if he door was open.
I kept some of my hens around for 16 weeks with no problems. They spent their life on real ground, eating real grass and they have been delicious so far. Nice, firm meat that was deep yellow skinned and much darker than grocery meat. My dark meat was actually red instead of grey.
I cannot imagine how a rooster crowing and eating through your feed and possibly getting you fined by the city and making your neighbors hate you is better than raising efficient, active and quiet birds.