Albert, doesn't look to me like a
stupid question . . . folks have to wonder where the heck these birds come from if they can't reproduce. And, there's a tendency to experiment in our backyards with 1 or 2 that we'd like to keep around.
About 35 years ago, my brother kept a half dozen Cornish X's and then the rascal gave them to me
. After keeping them around for several months - I gave them back
.
Probably, the Cornish X's of today aren't a lot like the ones from the 1970's. But, they didn't amount to much as laying hens and they sure could go thru the feed! My contribution to their health was allowing them plenty of exercise by free-ranging thru the day.
The parents of these critters are on carefully controlled diets from the moment they hatch. I learned not long ago that, sometimes, the roosters have a separate diet from the hens. They control these birds light, also, all in an effort to get productive breeders without them killing themselves over food. Slowing them down, is critically important.
Once they've got them under control and they mature, apparently the Cornish X parent stock are pretty good layers. Seemed to me that they have more trouble maintaining the fertility of the roosters but I suppose those guys are a little more
expendable.
And, then their offspring . . . these critters are kind of the
nuclear androids of the chicken world.
Steve