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Noticed that, too have ya?
I raised 20 of those this spring and boy was I glad to see that 8 weeks over and done with! There is nothing wrong going that route, I may even do it again with only 10 so I can have a few huge roasters, but the unnaturalness of those birds' lives really bugs me.
Noticed that, too have ya?

I'm talking about a Self-perpetuating, multi-generational, decent table meat, decent egg layers, true Old-Fashioned Farmyard flock.
If you've got too many roosters, you butcher the excess... If you have too many hens, or hens that aren't producing the way you expect... you butcher..... If you got company coming, and nothing in the freezer, you go grab a chicken, quickly butcher one out, and plan accordingly.
I'm talking Out on the Frontier, Before the Civil War... type of farmyard flock. One group of chickens does it all!
Kathy
That's exactly what I'm trying to do, too. I researched a lot and was leaning towards Dominiques but then decided their full grown weight of 5ish pounds wasn't big enough for me. Instead I've got a few barred rocks (grew pretty fast and DH is champing at the bit to try an extra roo) and some golden laced wyandottes and buckeyes.
My 15 week old BRs seem to be doing a good job foraging, they aren't running up to me as often any more looking for handouts so I'm hoping they'll teach the younger birds the ropes. My buckeyes and GLWs are about 5 weeks old and I'm planning on moving the biggest of them into a cage inside the coop tonight for a supervised week of integration and family harmony (I hope).
I chose the GLWs and buckeyes on what I've read on this forum and the fact they have smaller combs and it gets coooooold up here. So far the Wyandottes are growing faster than the buckeyes. Depending on my results with these I'm considering trying dark cornish and/or chanteclers next year, unless my current guys work out so well I can save some money!
I'm also interested to hear what another poster in this thread who has chanteclers thinks of them.
It's all a big adventure so far!
If you've got too many roosters, you butcher the excess... If you have too many hens, or hens that aren't producing the way you expect... you butcher..... If you got company coming, and nothing in the freezer, you go grab a chicken, quickly butcher one out, and plan accordingly.
I'm talking Out on the Frontier, Before the Civil War... type of farmyard flock. One group of chickens does it all!
Kathy
That's exactly what I'm trying to do, too. I researched a lot and was leaning towards Dominiques but then decided their full grown weight of 5ish pounds wasn't big enough for me. Instead I've got a few barred rocks (grew pretty fast and DH is champing at the bit to try an extra roo) and some golden laced wyandottes and buckeyes.
My 15 week old BRs seem to be doing a good job foraging, they aren't running up to me as often any more looking for handouts so I'm hoping they'll teach the younger birds the ropes. My buckeyes and GLWs are about 5 weeks old and I'm planning on moving the biggest of them into a cage inside the coop tonight for a supervised week of integration and family harmony (I hope).
I chose the GLWs and buckeyes on what I've read on this forum and the fact they have smaller combs and it gets coooooold up here. So far the Wyandottes are growing faster than the buckeyes. Depending on my results with these I'm considering trying dark cornish and/or chanteclers next year, unless my current guys work out so well I can save some money!
I'm also interested to hear what another poster in this thread who has chanteclers thinks of them.
It's all a big adventure so far!