BREEDING FOR PRODUCTION...EGGS AND OR MEAT.

We culled the adult flock down to 5 hens and 1 cock a couple of weeks ago. The culls were sold to a family whose kids are in class with my daughter, so we've been getting to hear about how they're getting on. It's amazing how quiet it seems with just one cock crowing and our really, really noisy hen gone.

The juvenile flock currently consists of 20 barnyard mixes of mixed ages and 33, 5-week-old, hatchery chicks. There are another 12 eggs in the incubator due to hatch later this week. I think that'll be the last hatch I do until the current pullets start laying. I'm hoping for 1 or 2 good cockerels from the barnyard mixes that I can use on the pullets in the fall. Right now there are 2 cockerels at 7-8 weeks that are definite culls. There is 1 cockerel from the last hatch that might be suitable. He's a Black Langshan x Barred Rock and is showing a lot of promise in the size department.

Seems like you still have your hands full.
 
@Arielle , I thought squirrel tail correlated with shorter back length so would impact laying capacity?

M

A squirrel tail is not necessarily linked to the length of back, though it often is.

Length of back does impact laying capacity. As you mentioned capacity is just that. Capacity. Capacity is not the full sum of a layer. It is a part, an important part, but not the sum total.
 
I don't know which I'm more worried about. I have chicks coming from SandHill in Iowa in a couple weeks. Don't know if I'm more worried that I might not get the chicks or if this will get worse before it gets better. :-(
 
I found this little experiment/study interesting. It would have been better comparing breeder quality heritage chickens rather than hatchery but interesting non the less.
http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&sour...14HoCA&usg=AFQjCNHQp37ynO9sUNNcPCbYJoH4lbArRQ
Shorter link: http://mysare.sare.org/mySARE/ProjectReport.aspx?do=viewRept&pn=FNC12-866&y=2013&t=1

Interesting indeed - the surprise for me was how poorly the SLW did in that survey. I am hoping Cackle's GLWs are a bit better than their SLWs, as I have 26 GLW pullets happily hopping around in the brooder coop.
 

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