- Oct 19, 2012
- 19
- 2
- 24
First time with meat birds, just ordered 50 Cornish X chicks, will be here on next Tuesday. I guess I am feeling cocky after successfully raising 60 SL Wyandottes and some silkies and bantiesj from day old chicks, as well as four turkeys from day old babies. The SLW & company are now about 6 weeks old and very very lively. We "started out" with 8 copper moran chicks hatched and raised by a broody RIR last fall. She is now broody again big time, so I also am having delivered 24 Chukar Partridge eggs, so hopefully she will outdo herself again and raise these like the Morans. I have also bought 10 six month old silkies and 2 Barred Rocks to complete the collection. We have far more eggs than we could ever eat ourselves, and give away dozens and dozens of eggs. The turkeys are doing fantastic in our massive predator-proof covered run we built last year (80 feet by 8 feet wide). We are right in the middle of expanding that huge covered even more by adding another 12' x 30' section, that should be finished in about a week. The turkeys have grown at an astonishing rate and are HUGE at around 10 weeks old. This winter, I finished a 12' x 8' brooder barn, where all of the SLWs & company are presently residing. And there are two smaller hen houses attached to the covered run. The smallest hen house is the residence of a lone runt silky chick that was being pecked to death by SLW & company. The bigger hen house is where the eggs are layed.
I plan on starting the CX's in a plastic tub inside our warm mudroom where my daughter will hand raise them, as they learn to eat and drink during those critical first few days and then putting them in the brooder bar at two weeks (the SLW & company will get kicked out to fend for themselves in the chaotic melee in the general population in the covered run) . My daughter is very patient at that task, and raised those four turkey poults who are now very friendly and used to being held and around people. It will be tough to kill them and eat them.
The brooder barn has a walled off brooder area that is "L" shaped and is about 80 square feet. Very easy to keep warm and dry and is very well ventilated. I think I might be able to get away with growing the CXs in their until they are six weeks old. The SLWs are almost six weeks old and are doing fine in there and until they are 8 weeks. I was thinking the brooder house would be ideal for the 12 hours of feeding/12 hours of starvation routine that supposedly CXs grow the fastest on. We will heavily supplement their organic commercial feed with lots and lots of weeds from our 6/10ths of an acre. Prickly lettuce is profuse around our lot, and the chickens and turkeys love it. The turkeys attack it like they have been starved for weeks.
Hopefully by the time the CX are ready to butcher (at about 10 or 12 weeks) we will be able to finish them off with an unlimited supply of apples. I heard that really makes them tasty.
My cousin, who is a professional butcher, will handle the processing end of the whole operation.
Anyway, I am operating under the belief that I have a good plan in place for my first foray into meat chickens. Feel free to chime in with criticisms and comments.
I plan on starting the CX's in a plastic tub inside our warm mudroom where my daughter will hand raise them, as they learn to eat and drink during those critical first few days and then putting them in the brooder bar at two weeks (the SLW & company will get kicked out to fend for themselves in the chaotic melee in the general population in the covered run) . My daughter is very patient at that task, and raised those four turkey poults who are now very friendly and used to being held and around people. It will be tough to kill them and eat them.
The brooder barn has a walled off brooder area that is "L" shaped and is about 80 square feet. Very easy to keep warm and dry and is very well ventilated. I think I might be able to get away with growing the CXs in their until they are six weeks old. The SLWs are almost six weeks old and are doing fine in there and until they are 8 weeks. I was thinking the brooder house would be ideal for the 12 hours of feeding/12 hours of starvation routine that supposedly CXs grow the fastest on. We will heavily supplement their organic commercial feed with lots and lots of weeds from our 6/10ths of an acre. Prickly lettuce is profuse around our lot, and the chickens and turkeys love it. The turkeys attack it like they have been starved for weeks.
Hopefully by the time the CX are ready to butcher (at about 10 or 12 weeks) we will be able to finish them off with an unlimited supply of apples. I heard that really makes them tasty.
My cousin, who is a professional butcher, will handle the processing end of the whole operation.
Anyway, I am operating under the belief that I have a good plan in place for my first foray into meat chickens. Feel free to chime in with criticisms and comments.
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