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- #41
- Jul 20, 2013
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That's what I was afraid of. We have some decisions to make around here!The one at the feeder is your only pullet. The others are most definitely cockerels.
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That's what I was afraid of. We have some decisions to make around here!The one at the feeder is your only pullet. The others are most definitely cockerels.
I have, more than once, seen the painfully uneducated tractor supply employees trying to sell cornish x to a customer clearly wanting egg layers only. It IS the fault and responsibility of tractor supply. They should have some responsibility for the animals they sell and the customers who count on them to help make the right choice for their family.
I bought cornish x last year for meat. I carefully restricted feeding and they free ranged with my laying hens. They were HUGE. But they were very healthy. I got 6 and ened up with three roosters and three hens. I only managed to butcher one. It was so painful and hard for me. I gave some away. But I kept one rooster. Big Meanie Meatie was his name.It didn't really fit, he was precious. He died in March, barely over a year old, but he did have a good life. He was in love with my Brown Leghorn hen and the feeling was mutual. They spent every day side by side.
I wanted him to go to sleep peacefully sitting in a patch of flowers but it didn't happen that way. He died during a horrible storm just inside the door of the doghouse he used for shelter...I am assuming it was a heart attack. But for a meatie he lived a long, happy life.
I miss that big guy. Sorry for the super long story. I was looking at pics of him last night and feeling sad so I just wanted to share.
goldfish should live 30 years if kept right... not many people keep them right though. bowls are a death sentence.
I have to mostly agree with others have posted here. Generally roos of Cornish Xs do not live very long,, even with highly limited diets. They are just so big and it seams that there hearts give out fast. Hens on the other hand can live fairly long lives and lay fairly well. They won't pump out eggs like some breeds but will, in my experience, lay every other day, even in winter. If you decide to keep the hen you will have to really watch her diet and kinda "force" her to find a lot of her own food free ranging,, the exercise is good for her.