That's what we have.Just did 40 cornish X in large cones. Fit no problem. Need to get the large cones. These are what we use. https://www.amazon.com/Miller-Poult.../B076ZVZ9XP/ref=psdc_3238155011_t1_B009S9EZ3M
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That's what we have.Just did 40 cornish X in large cones. Fit no problem. Need to get the large cones. These are what we use. https://www.amazon.com/Miller-Poult.../B076ZVZ9XP/ref=psdc_3238155011_t1_B009S9EZ3M
I grew up in Alaska. Sometimes we had snow before we finished culling the old layers in the fall. When the snow was almost knee-deep, it worked really well to stomp a hole for the chicken. And it saved me trekking through the snow to get the body after it quit flapping, since a chicken can go across the top of the snow while I sink down into it. Also, blood is much more obvious on snow than it is on grass. This made the difference between one bloody area (where we butchered) vs. having the whole yard sprinkled with blood, that would stay VERY visible until the next snowfall covered it up.I don't think I'd want to be butchering in deep snow, but that's a great idea.
Disclaimer: It's my husband who says they don't fit.If you can't fit a Cornish X in that cone you dont have Cornish X you have turkeys.
Maybe you just grow them a lot bigger than we do.
Do you pull the head out of its socket or do you slice its neck?What most of us think is the hardest part of processing birds, is the flapping at the point of death. A 5 gallon bucket helps immensely. I do the deed and drop them in the bucket. The bucket contains the bird, and while there is movement, it does not get as violent. Your birds stay much cleaner.
Mrs K