perchie, others can answer your questions about bleeding and keeping clean better than I, but I wanted to respond about doing it all on your own.
I am married and have a capable other person to help out. Who doesn't, at all (chicken-stuff at least...he can hold his own in the household in other places). The chicken stuff is all up to me. I will say that I think it will be very, very demanding to raise CX and make a profit, doing all the work yourself. I raise batches of 10 CX at a time, and 10 alone is a bit taxing on me! The butchering...the set up, the process, the cleanup...for 3 birds took 1.5 hours this weekend. Okay, that's not much time, and most of it was set up and clean up, but 6 birds is the most I can handle butchering at one time. I'm youngish and fit, and still find it tiring! I think it would be very hard work to actually try to process enough birds to make a profit, if it is you and you alone doing everything. Dang near impossible if you are otherwise working fulltime and/or have kids to take care of. If your job is the chickens, then it might be more realistic.
If you raised quail, that might be much easier to process in quantities all alone--no gutting, no plucking, no rib scraping for the dang lungs....basically just ripping the breast bone up and away.
I just re-read--yes, you can easily raise and process the chickens for your own table, no problem. I think the problem would lie in trying to process enough chickens to make money, totally by yourself. Even with one other person to help out, the difficulties are much less.
X2
I'm the lone ranger here when it comes to anything outdoors.
@ $11.99 lb. That is outrageous! Doesn't it make you want to get more meat birds?![]()
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I've had several friends tell me they'd pay whatever I asked for just one of my chickens processed.
I just didn't have the heart to ask 30 even though I had at least that in them in the bird, food, electricity, labor, etc..
I do one or two at a time now. I had 50 Freedom Rangers at this time last year. I wondered how in the world I had the time to get them all done.AMEN!
I know exactly what you mean. I'm a 1 woman team and it's about to kill me and my remaining number is below 100 (maybe 90 left) being as though some have already been processed.I would kill myself if I had to do this again with this many. Next time will be no more than 20. It's too much for 1 person to handle.![]()
Although I do have enough people who will buy all of them, the problem there lies filing the orders in a timely manner. I can only take 1 maybe 2 orders at a time.
Then I had a brainstorm. I posted on our local chicken meetup that I would be conducting 2 classes on chicken processing. Enrollment filled up fast. I timed the classes so we could process half as Cornish game hens and the rest as big birds at 8 weeks.
I gave away a randomly selected attendance prize of one bird at each event.
I've been wanting to do pelts and capes every time I process but it is such a painstaking process. You have to carefully skin the whole head. They want those tiny feathers around the eyes and comb.Strictly for crafting and artwork AND for people who Tie Flys for Fly fishing. You know youcan ask anything you want for something Wether or not you get it is another thing.
I want to give Guinea pelts a try if I do some processing of my own. Their feathers are SOOOO pretty even the ones you pick up in the yard can be used for making earrings and artsy stuff.
deb