BREEDING FOR PRODUCTION...EGGS AND OR MEAT.

Thanks, everyone! I had a very tiring morning, but got 10 cockerels processed. I skinned all the fully feathered ones (@Beekissed has a great video that I watched and followed that really helped). The first was awkward, but the rest went pretty quickly after that. Then I dry plucked the three Naked Necks, which wasn't all that hard (though the weather was turning and my feet were killing me, so I waited on the pin feathers - I will pull those out in the kitchen.) I got done right before it started pouring, and all of them are resting in the fridge while I try to recover myself...

- Ant Farm
Nice Job!

I try to limit myself to three a day.
 
Thanks, y'all! I had one Naked Neck I decided to wait and keep for observation instead of processing today. Well, upon observation, he has a wry tail (never really noticed before).
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Guess I'm processing again - maybe I'll wait until next weekend to give myself a break.

- Ant Farm
 
Thanks, everyone! I had a very tiring morning, but got 10 cockerels processed. I skinned all the fully feathered ones (@Beekissed
 has a great video that I watched and followed that really helped). The first was awkward, but the rest went pretty quickly after that. Then I dry plucked the three Naked Necks, which wasn't all that hard (though the weather was turning and my feet were killing me, so I waited on the pin feathers - I will pull those out in the kitchen.) I got done right before it started pouring, and all of them are resting in the fridge while I try to recover myself...

- Ant Farm  

You are doing good to race through 10 before a storm hats of to you on your first skinning
 
Quote:
Thanks!!! Bee's video was great - I was beginning to despair after the first one, which went slow, but the others went a lot faster. In pulling the organs out, I guess I was tired, because for one carcass, the gall bladder tore and leaked a little. I promptly separated all organs from carcass and rinsed everything multiple times. And I marked the carcass so I'd know which one it was. Any tips for preparing it? Will brining help? (That's what I intend to do with all of them before freezing them.)

- Ant Farm
 
Thanks!!! Bee's video was great - I was beginning to despair after the first one, which went slow, but the others went a lot faster. In pulling the organs out, I guess I was tired, because for one carcass, the gall bladder tore and leaked a little. I promptly separated all organs from carcass and rinsed everything multiple times. And I marked the carcass so I'd know which one it was. Any tips for preparing it? Will brining help? (That's what I intend to do with all of them before freezing them.)

- Ant Farm
I have heard it going both ways--brining before freezing and after. I brine after freezing because I do not think it is good to brine them too long.

But yes, brine helps them to be more tender.
 
Hey, all, I have a question about wry tail that I'm not sure I have worked out after doing some reading on threads on BYC. Hoping to get some input here on this thread given that we aren't so wed to following SOP here...

I understand wry tail is a defect that is thought to maybe be genetic, and may be related to the spine. My question is: independent of SOP-type considerations, is there a functional/health reason to cull/not breed from a rooster or hen with wry tail?

This NN cockerel is a big ol' mottled mix in the first place, and I am only keeping birds for my backyard. I don't intend on pursuing a project trying to establish a breed with him. Still watching him, sometimes he holds it straight, many times it's cocked to the side. I may end up deciding to cull him anyway, but I was hoping to learn something about this.

Thanks!

- Ant Farm
 
Hey, all, I have a question about wry tail that I'm not sure I have worked out after doing some reading on threads on BYC. Hoping to get some input here on this thread given that we aren't so wed to following SOP here...

I understand wry tail is a defect that is thought to maybe be genetic, and may be related to the spine. My question is: independent of SOP-type considerations, is there a functional/health reason to cull/not breed from a rooster or hen with wry tail?

This NN cockerel is a big ol' mottled mix in the first place, and I am only keeping birds for my backyard. I don't intend on pursuing a project trying to establish a breed with him. Still watching him, sometimes he holds it straight, many times it's cocked to the side. I may end up deciding to cull him anyway, but I was hoping to learn something about this.

Thanks!

- Ant Farm
Can be a bad enough spinal deformity causing the wry tail, so not best for fertility/ability to mate, and for good carcass.
 
Agreed...the hens have trouble having their egg out of that crooked pelvis and, if the eggs are large, they can end up dying from it. I'd not deliberately breed a wry tail male over any hens if you can help it.
 

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