CanadianBuckeye
Songster
The biggest cull (other than for disease) I've ever read about was for a leghorn breeder. He had a judge go through 200 birds, when the judge was finished there was only a trio left.
I think it's understood that if you are breeding and selecting for specific traits, many many more birds will be culled than kept if you want to get anywhere. I feel (my opinion only) that once they are dead, it's kind of irrelevant what happens to them next, but hopefully like to think they aren't "wasted" (insert a definition here).
The most I've ever culled at one time was three. As you well know I'm faint of heart, I cringe when I think of killing anything
- but in a way a cull- a- thon is almost easier (mentally, for me) than doing it piecemeal- sort of like pulling off a band aid.
When hundreds of thousands of (healthy) poultry are killed to prevent the spread of flu, it puts things in perspective, although to be totally truthful I think it's a good idea not to hatch any more chicks or keep more chickens than there's room, money and time for.
I think it's understood that if you are breeding and selecting for specific traits, many many more birds will be culled than kept if you want to get anywhere. I feel (my opinion only) that once they are dead, it's kind of irrelevant what happens to them next, but hopefully like to think they aren't "wasted" (insert a definition here).
The most I've ever culled at one time was three. As you well know I'm faint of heart, I cringe when I think of killing anything

When hundreds of thousands of (healthy) poultry are killed to prevent the spread of flu, it puts things in perspective, although to be totally truthful I think it's a good idea not to hatch any more chicks or keep more chickens than there's room, money and time for.