I remember that now! That’s why your name looked so familiar. I believe it was another Orpington. A partridge one. A long night for us both. I’m happy to see you’re still hatching! I have some hatching tonight.
Thanks for the encouragement on the roos. Time will tell if we can wait the full 6 months. This is a particularly rowdy bunch of Marans.
6# at 3 1/2 months is an excellent weight for a heritage bird. I think I might try New Hampshires, meat bred line, next year. I’ll consider English Orpingtons too if they get that big. I’ll have to do some reading up before deciding.
Aww, you remember! Yes, it was a Partridge Orpington. It didn't make it, sadly, but it was malpositioned and pretty much stood no chance, finding a beak in the tangle of feathers and blood was impossible (especially for a newbie). The experience was still very educational though, and helped my future assists (which were all successful). Interestingly, all my assists so far have developed problems later on and died young (under a year), which has changed my position on assisting. So I only assisted one this year (the one from this thread) and want to see how it turns out, just out of curiosity, but it's starting to look like a boy so the experiment probably won't last long...
Let me know if you find a good heritage breed for meat. I've been looking for one, too. I settled on English Orps because they get big, and the "thick" kind of meaty big, not just tall and bony kind of big, and because they are docile and will be easy to raise and handle. But they are hard to find local, and expensive

This year's brood are English Orpingtons, too, and I won't be able to wait long for the boys because I have an extra complication. I'm going away on vacation in August, with my husband staying behind and in charge of the animals, and I don't want to leave him with potentially crowing cockerels to have to deal with on his own. Processing, and everything animal, is my domain, he'll be taking over for me when I'm gone but I don't want to push it. So I'll need to process the males before I go, at which point they'll be only 2 and a half months old... I'll probably just throw them in a pot together and make soup.