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- #31
This is my first year breeding so I am a year behind you and I am learning the hard way with all my projects. So glad you shared Hulk with this thread, It gives me a good indication of where my Dorking X Ranger is headed.
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If you do it start a thread about it, I want to see how well other crossings do.I don’t think he was breeding hybrid to hybrid but I don’t know. He’s a (or was) a really big local breeder. Owned S&G poultry. Something that I found interesting is that when I bred my rangers back to themselves it actually improved hardiness and growth. They were still not great and I lost quite a few but they were better and matured faster. The pullets grew to about 8-9lbs by 6 months. An improvement from last year.
Hulk is indeed a big boy, I think he got the best of both worlds from his parents.
I don’t have a whole lot of experience eitherthis was my first year breeding chickens to any extent.
Well, I'm firmly on the Dorking train now. Last night, we cooked the 14+ week old Dorking rooster we butchered earlier this year. It was small -- dressing out at 3 1/3 lbs. We brined it overnight, and oven roasted it. I was so worried it would be chewy, but it was perfect. It had slightly more density and pronounced chicken flavor than a CX, but in a very positive way. DH and I both thought it was excellent. It also carried more meat on its frame for it's size, then some of the other EE-mix cockerels I've processed in the past. Lots of really quality dark meat.
So, I'm sold on the Dorkings and I'm hoping that by crossing it was a faster growing, meatier bird like a RR, we might get the best of both worlds.
I can't wait to see how your experiment turns out.