I get it, it makes sense on paper but I wonder if we were to compare 3lbs to 3lbs. 3lbs on a standard bird is stretched out over a large frame where as 3lbs of bantam flesh would be more compactly distributed and therefore of greater quality. At least that's what I assume and of course my interest is meat. For us the eggs are a bonus and the medium for more birds to grow out. But does it take a bantam the same amount of time to get to 3lbs as it would a standard to get to 6lbs? Or are growth rates similar. Perhaps the cost in raising would be almost the same if that was the case.
Of course, if we're just talking eggs for home use then I think bantams are kind of cool.
Just pondering aloud, not really expecting real answers. I did go hunting bantams though as the only pictures I'd seen are of bantam cochins and seramas (no thanks) and I came across this fellow~ tell me that doesn't make a proper meal! Bantam (cuckoo?) Dorking in the UK.
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which begs the question, at least for me~ how does one make a bantam if they're not a bantam breed? Just use the smaller stock?
One thing I wouldn't like about bantams is the egg size. Some recipes are amenable to using more of the smaller eggs to approximate a medium/large egg. But other recipes don't always do so well when you're trying to use smaller eggs. I have tried to adapt some recipes using the small pullet eggs we get every year with new hatches - it was troublesome and just easier to use the first small pullet eggs as scrambled eggs and not use them in an actual recipe. I wouldn't want to have smaller sized eggs all the time.
I know of someone that made a bantam Java by crossing with a bantam of another breed. From what I hear, he is still trying to get it to have more consistency in looking like a smaller version of the large fowl. That would be the faster way to get the size down. But if someone was wanting to get a bantam version of a large fowl and still retain the look of the large fowl, there would be a lot of work to do to try to keep the small size while breeding out the unwanted characteristics of the bantam used.
For some reference of that 3 lb weight - we butchered 4 Java cockerels this week. They were 5 months old and were on the runty side compared to others from the same hatch. They dressed out from 3 lb 5 oz to 3 lb 11 oz. Usually we don't butcher them this young unless they have obvious flaws - these guys were smaller and some had comb side sprigs, so we went ahead and thinned the flock earlier than we usually do.