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If you're willing/able to do the plucking or skinning and the excavating, why not do it all yourself? Or get someone to help? There's lots of info on this forum about how exactly to do The Deed, and lots of philosophical discussion about how to remain a nice person during & after.
Few people enjoy the actual taking-of-life part of it, but it's a necessity if you want to eat meat. Chickens just keep hopping off the plate if you try to eat them alive. And for those of us unfamiliar with the procedure, it can be unnerving the first few times it's done.
But by doing it yourself you know for certain that these birds you've raised are being dispatched humanely, that they're receiving kind words & gentle handling right up to the very end. The way I do it is very quiet & calm, and quick.
The person who showed me how to process chickens was a neighbor who hunted. Maybe there is someone you know who hunts or fishes, or who has had experience in butchering livestock, who could assist you.
If you're willing/able to do the plucking or skinning and the excavating, why not do it all yourself? Or get someone to help? There's lots of info on this forum about how exactly to do The Deed, and lots of philosophical discussion about how to remain a nice person during & after.
Few people enjoy the actual taking-of-life part of it, but it's a necessity if you want to eat meat. Chickens just keep hopping off the plate if you try to eat them alive. And for those of us unfamiliar with the procedure, it can be unnerving the first few times it's done.
But by doing it yourself you know for certain that these birds you've raised are being dispatched humanely, that they're receiving kind words & gentle handling right up to the very end. The way I do it is very quiet & calm, and quick.
The person who showed me how to process chickens was a neighbor who hunted. Maybe there is someone you know who hunts or fishes, or who has had experience in butchering livestock, who could assist you.