One more word of explanation. No, I am not raising little chickens outside in zero degree F weather and icicles.
I am outside the United States.
I am outside the United States.
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We didn't figure you were.....since you have "puddles" of water.......LOLOne more word of explanation. No, I am not raising little chickens outside in zero degree F weather and icicles.
I am outside the United States.
Good job! Sorry to hear about the coccidia At least you were able to use that misfortune to move forward with some hands on experience w/ caponizing.
We didn't figure you were.....since you have "puddles" of water.......LOL
Hey Ruthster, I have been meaning to ask you, but I keep forgetting(old age you know..LOL), when you practiced the caponizing on your dead birds, since they didn't bleed out as a cause of death, how visible were the blood vessels when you were removing the testicles? I would think it would be easier to see them than when you practice on a bird you have butchered to eat. If so, that will serve you well when operating on the live birds.I am writing on a tablet, and the submission process is a little buggy, so this is two posts.
The pic above is from a little ten-week-old barred rock mix with a stll-undeveloped comb that died of coccidia.
I used it for practice, and he was indeed a him. Used a Pilling remover with a B guitar string. This fellow had his testes connected well with the peritoneum, so the high E string (smallest) didn't work, and I had to use the B. One side was a slip result and the other was removed OK. Used a sawing and then twisting motion to get it out.
The pic shows a lentil and red bean for size comparison.
A smaller (dead) one I did last week came out easily with the high E string.
Now, I gotta figure out what to do about these coccidia! Already have treatment in their water but they had access to some dirty rain puddles also....