The turkeys pluck easier than the chickens, except for tails and wings, so we dry plucked and I saved all the feathers this time. Lots of soft downy feathers that I was thinking about pillows or comforters with them. I just couldn't throw away feathers from 4 turkeys.I agree with all of this...waste and huge, unrealistic expectations abound. And, I like a chicken that lays and lays well and has a meaty carcass but expecting that bird to lay at 4 mo. of age or be big as a CX before it crows is crazy, to say the least. Trying to invent the super bird might be an all absorbing hobby but it's not realistic expectations at all. There's something to be said for average maturity...I do believe studies done indicate that birds maturing at 6 mo. do better all the way around for laying longevity and production, as well as for hardiness.
I also agree that the colossal waste in this country is fueling the cruelty to the animals and long term destruction of the soils by the commercial agriculture system.
Though I can't see myself eating chicken heads or stuffing chicken intestines with some kind of sausage, there are many parts of the chicken that are not being used and being thrown away...some folks won't even feed them back to the chickens or dogs. I'm trying to do better on this myself and intend to start saving the underfeathers of these WRs for stuffing pillows and comforters and trying to do more towards storing eggs when production is good so we have them when egg production falls off. What we don't put in the jar or stock, the dogs consume and that saves me on commercially derived nutrition for them. I'm hoping to score some free or really cheap rabbits out of the locals for supplementing/growing my own dog food this year as well.
I'm also going to start treating my garden as an all year round salad bar and finally start cultivating fall/winter crops so we can eat fresh all year. Why am I wasting that space all winter long when I could be growing fresh food for my family and for the chickens? Why in the world am I buying that nutritional deficient lettuce in the store? I've got to get back to producing more of my own food, storing more, growing more all year round.
I've gardened in winter here in North TX under plastic with good results for cold weather crops by planting them in November. A couple of winters it was too cold so the crops didn't have much growth, but they stayed alive and once the temps got warmer, they were taking off and growing like weeds. One of my future projects will be making tin can solar heat collectors to pump warm air into the garden beds and see if I can actually grow warm weather crops during winter. And I'll need something for a larger thermal mass to keep the temp from dropping too low at night when the sun is down - big rocks or water containers painted black. Some of the videos I've seen, folks were still able to get 80 degree air out of their heat collectors on overcast days. Would love to be able to have tomato harvests in January.