Sure, lots of people can read - the problem is with being sure brain is engaged before putting mouth (in this case, keyboard fingers) in gear.
THAT'S A GENTLE TEASE, FOR THOSE WHO MISUNDERSTOOD THE PREMISE OF THE ORIGINAL POST!! It is NOT meant as an insult!!!! Please don't take offense!!!
More seriously, I think everyone has their own definition of "sustainable" and some apparently have a broader definition than the original poster. The cornish crosses are not sustainable in this sense because they do not reproduce themselves; in fact, most can't live long enough to achieve reproductive age, due to their genetic liabilities. So in the original poster's stated definition of "sustainable", cornish crosses are a moot point. I'm sure this has been said already, as I have not had a chance to read every post in this topic - but I will, because I am also interested in a self-sustaining flock of meat birds (oh, no, did I just introduce another term to be misunderstood??!!)
I just ordered my first meat birds - Rangers - but would prefer to keep one flock which provides both meat and laying hens...hatching out subsequent generations for subsequent years of yummy meat and eggs. I will follow this topic with great interest. Keep the information coming, BYCers!!
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But, my freezer runs on electricity provided by a power company that burns fossil fuels to produce that electricity. I think that means I cannot claim sustainability when it comes to the chicken portion of my food supply regardless of what kind of chickens I put in there.
Tim
I am not talking about your family being completely sustainable. Just like I pointed out in the first post. Breeding for new stock, hatching the new stock, raising the new stock, processing the excess yourself, etc. I don't even want to know what or how you feed them.
Can't anyone read today or am I just going crazy???? I don't care if you use your grandma's bike to do chores with a wicker basket your mom made. I just want to know about the dang chickens!!!!!
Maybe sustainable is not the right word. Would you prefer "renewable"?
Ways of living more sustainably can take many forms from reorganising living conditions (e.g., ecovillages, eco-municipalities and sustainable cities), reappraising economic sectors (permaculture, green building, sustainable agriculture), or work practices (sustainable architecture), using science to develop new technologies (green technologies, renewable energy), to adjustments in individual lifestyles that conserve natural resources.