New incubator and new barn on the way! Yep, sounds like more chicks are on their way also! Ha ha.
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Ouch! Bummer! Sorry to hear about that.Things have changed so no Beifelders for me. The water heater broke and its fix tha and have hot water or get chicks...
So caponizing has an even steeper learning curve than I thought. I still do not have a capon, but I do want to share a pic of one of the two CULL cockerels from the batch I bought from Luanne. He was just shy of 11 weeks old, and that is a gallon size storage baggie he's chilling in. Lovely looking carcass, especially considering he was the third largest out of the four rose comb cockerels. In about three generations, I should have some outstanding looking cockerel carcasses! Here is tomorrow's dinner:
Just think, Azar has a much meatier feeling breast than this. That's my keeper from this batch.
Today I got a commercial style layer cage. I had a buddy that had a couple 10 foot sections laying in his barn for years. I figured I'd take one and use it to hold a rooster or a couple birds if needed. Then an idea popped into my head, instead of trap nesting, which I do not have time to regularly check, could I get valuable information if I had my layers in these cages for a week or so? Since they are not on grass or in a chicken tractor yet, would the move set them back and give me useless data?
What ways can I isolate a couple breeding hens from the other 'cull' hens that I need for egg production? I'm not keen on keeping hens in a small cage just like I'm not keen on keeping dairy cows tied in a stall. But if it works and gives me useful data....