I noticed this myself on the stinking birds! I have noticed though since I have started the FF they don't stink. I have picked up like 3-4 of them and held them close to my chest to keep them calm and they don't stink at all. Believe me I have a nose to, I can smell what others in my family can't.Just an update - We butchered our meat birds this last weekend. Started out with 51, lost 3 at the very beginning, so had 48. We culled the roosters a couple of weeks ago, so had 33 hens to butcher at this time. (Had 3 grown children, their spouses, and 3 of 5 grandchildren helping- all in varying degrees) Grandkids helped catch birds and bring to the killing cones. (3 orange plastic traffic cones bought at Home Depot). I slit their throats and let them bleed out and oversaw the overall process. Son-in-law scalded and manned the chicken plucker. Others took turns with cleaning and gutting the birds. This was the first time for everyone but myself and my husband - and we had a blast.
We set everything up under a big oak tree in the yard. Killing cones out in the sunshine, next to that the scalding pot, and over a little ways the chicken plucker (whizbang plucker my husband built from the kit). On the other side of the tree we had a long table set up with a large trash can for the offal, and 4 buckets with ice for the necks and extra fat, chicken feet, gizzards, livers and hearts. At the end of the table were a couple of ice chests with ice for packing the cleaned birds. A water hose was also available for those gutting the birds to clean the carcass with fresh clean water.
The biggest concern for everyone had been the odor of the butchering process. Two of the boys had worked at a bird farm as teens, feeding and tending animals and still remember and hate that chicken smell. They had been impressed when the birds were growing because the FF birds did not stink. Well the same consensus was given on Saturday. FF birds DO NOT have that sick poultry odor when processing. My daughter told me that the main thing she was worried about was the smell while butchering the birds. Once she realized these birds did not stink, and she was shown how to gut the birds, she got busy and did great. She said that since the odor was not a problem, then the process was not that bad. My son-in-law, who had never done anything like this and I could tell was there because he is just a sweet guy and did not want to be the only one who refused, did the scalding and manned the chicken plucker. He told me later, that he thought it was going to be something really gory, and that it was actually a very clean process and not bad at all. He definitely won't mind doing it again.
The cleaned birds averaged 4 to 4-1/2 pounds. I left them to rest in the icebox overnight then used shrink wrap bags to freeze them.
The main thing is everyone is thrilled to get the fresh chicken. Since we had culled roosters from this batch several weeks ago, they had already had a taste of the meat and loved the fact that it has a real chicken flavor and also texture to the meat. The meat is not tough, but does have more texture than what you normally get in the store. They are already asking when we will start the next batch, and everyone is game for helping with the butchering again. They are also asking for ducks, so we may try a batch of ducks as well.
I can't tell you how much I appreciate the info on this thread. I stumbled across this and have followed it for the whole 115 pages and counting. Before we started using the FF, when these birds were about 3 weeks old, the smell of the chickens was horrible, even though the chicken tractor was moved every day. These birds just STUNK. Within days of changing the feed to Fermented feed, the smell was gone. These birds were healthy and very active. I could not have asked for a better outcome. I am sure that had we not used FF, this would have been our first and last family butchering day. As it is, I believe we have started a new family tradition!
