- Mar 27, 2013
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The reason he has no comb is because he is a capon and has no testosterone coursing through his veins since the testicles were removed. He has a small, very pale comb and he doesn't crow. I think he would dress out more than that myself. I am not going to butcher to find out. I always thought that dressed weight is 65 to 70 percent of live weight. I am gonna let him keep growing at least another 3-4 months. Since he has been castrated, his flesh will remain moist and tender as he grows, like a steer would be compared to a bull. I am anxious to see how dressed weight compares to live weight. Some breeds of capons.....a Jersey Giant, I think.....have weighed in upwards of 20 pounds live.He's gorgeous, but he has no comb to speak of. My Copper Maran has a huge comb. So he got the Black Maran coat and the Orpington's comb? I have an EE lavendar rooster. I wonder if the chicks from him will be all dark or will some actually have lavendar feathers. It's hard to believe that 8 pounds dresses down to only 3 1/2 pounds. I'm ignorant, I know, but what is a capon? Do you really castrate a rooster to make him a capon? Bee was talking about the size of Bud's testis. I wouldn't know where to find them. I took comparative anatomy about 50 years ago so I don't remember any more. I saved a chicken that died to take apart and ck out the guts, but it's still in the freezer. I've always cut up whole birds, but those had been cleaned out already. I did my own turkeys in Mexico but that also was a long time ago. : )
Finding the testicle is actually easy, making an incision between the lower two ribs. You just have to be careful because there are major blood vessels nearby. They are located near the backbone below the kidneys.