Unfortunately some just can't survive and it is a necessary evil that some have to be culled to end their suffering. While I do not breed birds I do raise them and some are just messed up. I usually give them a good home if they are not suffering. I won't cull them just cause they look funny. If they get along just fine I let them live out there happy little lives. Lives of which are usually shorter than most other birds. I have a cross beak EE and a large fowl buff cochin with what I call chicken scoliosis. Nothing really wrong with her except she is bent in the middle. She gets along just fine with the other birds and they almost yield to her because they know she is different. I love her and she will stay til her dying day. Her name is Twisted Sister.
Now having said all of that if you are doing a breeding project you have to get rid of or cull out the less desirable birds. Personally if I were going to do a breeding project I would just rehome or sell the less desirable ones. Again why kill it for being ugly? I wouldn't want to die because my nose is bigger than everyone else's...would you?
When we do have to end their lives to end suffering for whatever reason my husband does it and he uses the dislocation method. You just hold the body in one hand and the head in the other and pull hard and fast. We have used this method for years UNTIL RECENTLY. The last bird I asked him to cull, he went out and did the deed and placed the bird in an empty feed sack and put it in the back til he got ready to dispose of it. Well he spaced it and I went on with my life and three days later... I had this strange bird show up in my yard. It never crossed my mind. I asked him about it when he got home and he went out to look at this bird that we thought got dumped off. He come back in the house mortified and said, "That is a zombie chicken!!" " I forgot about it and it came back to life!!" He told me it was dead but I guess it really wasn't. On the bright side the chicken lived and I wouldn't let him try again. I nursed that thing back to perfect health and a friend of mine took zombie chicken to free range on a huge farm.
So the lesson learned after years of raising chickens is....cut it's head off!!! Quick and clean with no hesitation. I personally just can't do it no matter how much I know it has to happen. It causes me a great deal of heartache and I usually have a panic attack at just the thought of it. Not everyone is like me though. I would suggest that you at least try once before you decide you can't. My issues are with the birds eyes. Yep I am a loo loo I suppose
Anyway if you find you have to do it and you just can't then try to find a friend or family member that can.
Good Luck and
Now having said all of that if you are doing a breeding project you have to get rid of or cull out the less desirable birds. Personally if I were going to do a breeding project I would just rehome or sell the less desirable ones. Again why kill it for being ugly? I wouldn't want to die because my nose is bigger than everyone else's...would you?
When we do have to end their lives to end suffering for whatever reason my husband does it and he uses the dislocation method. You just hold the body in one hand and the head in the other and pull hard and fast. We have used this method for years UNTIL RECENTLY. The last bird I asked him to cull, he went out and did the deed and placed the bird in an empty feed sack and put it in the back til he got ready to dispose of it. Well he spaced it and I went on with my life and three days later... I had this strange bird show up in my yard. It never crossed my mind. I asked him about it when he got home and he went out to look at this bird that we thought got dumped off. He come back in the house mortified and said, "That is a zombie chicken!!" " I forgot about it and it came back to life!!" He told me it was dead but I guess it really wasn't. On the bright side the chicken lived and I wouldn't let him try again. I nursed that thing back to perfect health and a friend of mine took zombie chicken to free range on a huge farm.
So the lesson learned after years of raising chickens is....cut it's head off!!! Quick and clean with no hesitation. I personally just can't do it no matter how much I know it has to happen. It causes me a great deal of heartache and I usually have a panic attack at just the thought of it. Not everyone is like me though. I would suggest that you at least try once before you decide you can't. My issues are with the birds eyes. Yep I am a loo loo I suppose

Good Luck and
