DesertChic, consider this. Currently I have been prompted to monitor and graph weights of my meat birds for utility and breeding purposes. This is a weight gain chart to monitor each birds individual progress. I'm not tracking eggs here and it is strictly for growth and weight. Applying a numbered leg band to each bird lets you record each birds individual assets on a weekly basis. Lets say you want to cull your birds at a dressed table weight of 5 lbs. This is the weight you are happy with and not the mature weight your bird will actually grow to. Why wait until the bird is 8lbs. at 20 plus weeks old if you are happy eating it at 5 lbs? You use less feed and enjoy the benefits sooner. When you chart like this, you can select the best productive growers and weight gainers and choose those birds for breeding. I believe this is why my mentors are pushing me to do this. It makes sense if you can find the time to follow it. Breeding for production, eggs and or meat is much different than breeding for show purposes.
I wish there was more talk on selecting roosters as I feel there is something truly important we can learn. They play a major role in more ways than not! You may have many roosters with one claiming to be the boss but he may not be the best fit for utility breeding and or the goals you are trying to achieve!![]()
Actually, this outstanding advice very similar to what I'm already doing. I was always compulsive about recording their weights weekly to every two weeks as well as taking regular photos of the birds, but @gjensen also suggested that I graph their weights and that advice has proven enormously helpful. The only areas I'm still struggling with are 1) determining at what weight I'm content to cull my non-breeders, and 2) and most importantly, having enough free time to cull more than one bird at a time. I can chop and dice veggies and fruits like a Ninja, but I'm still pretty darn slow at processing those birds and my back usually demands a break after I've processed only one of them. Plus I promised my husband I would only butcher the birds when he's here at home, which is only on the weekends. (He's convinced that some big, bad, panicked cockerel will get the better of me and peck my eyes out or something if he's not here to "protect" me.
