Fred's Hens :
Dispatching.
There are cultural, heritage, handed down differences in the proper killing of the chicken. I was taught VERY carefully, very strictly and here is our heritage. Realizing it is just one of many handed down methods, taught from father to son, grandmother to grandson for thousands of years, down through countless generations.
Gather the chicken and grasp the wing tips, gathering the wing tips down to ankles of the chicken. The chicken calms. With this grip of two wings and two ankles, transfer this grip into one hand. If you lose a wing, start again. Holding the chicken with the one hand grip, the other hand is free. Lay the chicken's neck and head on the chopping block. In our case, that block was solid, aged elm and 20" in diameter. Taking the hatchet, sharpened to a razor edge, wait for the chicken to extend it's neck, giving a long, no miss target. With a swift, purposeful strike... chop. Clean kill every time.
Continue to hold the chicken. No wing flapping. No letting go. Do not want the meat bruised. In a few moments the impulses will cease. Stick this chick, neck first into tapered pail. Do another and another until the bucket is filled with 4 or 5 birds. Take the bucket to scalding/plucking station. I was too young to scald.
I had dispatched over a 1000 birds before my 12th birthday.
You don't even give him a Valium first?
Sorry, couldn't resist! I appreciate your post, as I've got four roosters destined for the smoker very soon.