I don't know where you get all your birds, Aoxa, but they all~each and every one~are just utter perfection to look upon! Such beautiful examples of the breeds, with glorious feathering and coloring and form! That goose is just like a piece of art.
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Not all of them are that prettyI don't know where you get all your birds, Aoxa, but they all~each and every one~are just utter perfection to look upon! Such beautiful examples of the breeds, with glorious feathering and coloring and form! That goose is just like a piece of art.
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What breeds of Chickens make up the "CX"? or where can I find that info at? Six weeks
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and Eight These aren't my bigger boys pictured. I have some boys much smaller than others. Probably the smaller ones are the better foragers, not so aggressive at the food line.
Highly guarded.. Cornish and Plymouth Rocks are in the mix, but it has taken generations upon generations to get it just right..What breeds of Chickens make up the "CX"? or where can I find that info at?
What breeds of Chickens make up the "CX"? or where can I find that info at?
Quote: Not really a highly guarded secret because truth be told the companies might not even know what is in them. They often use cultivar stock now (no better way to describe it). From conception to fruition the turn around time for breeding a broiler is 3-5 years.
Not really a highly guarded secret because truth be told the companies might not even know what is in them. They often use cultivar stock now (no better way to describe it). From conception to fruition the turn around time for breeding a broiler is 3-5 years.
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So I guess that would depend on what you want in a meat bird. Often times it does not make sense (financially) to breed one own's meat bird as their is a lot of breeding that has to be done ( producing 700+ into the thousands or tens of thousands to get birds with desirable traits).
However you could start with breeds to build a frame, So cornish, jersey giants, North American (not australian) Light Sussex, Rhode Island Red, Barred plymouth rocks, etc. If you want to I would suggest getting a couple dozen hens of each breed along with some cocks (10:1 10 hens to 1 cock keep that in mind) from hatcheries or production lines. This is not the time nor place for show quality lines and just breed them together. You will have to be very very good at keeping records on weights ( weighing birds at least once a week, up to four times a week) the chicks would need some type of ID on each from ~1-3 days. As you might have figured out this is why very very few people own broilers. Also there are traits that I have not mention like feather and skin colour and growth uniformity.
sounds very pricy. I might just buy Freedom Ranger and keep some for offspring.So I guess that would depend on what you want in a meat bird. Often times it does not make sense (financially) to breed one own's meat bird as their is a lot of breeding that has to be done ( producing 700+ into the thousands or tens of thousands to get birds with desirable traits).
However you could start with breeds to build a frame, So cornish, jersey giants, North American (not australian) Light Sussex, Rhode Island Red, Barred plymouth rocks, etc. If you want to I would suggest getting a couple dozen hens of each breed along with some cocks (10:1 10 hens to 1 cock keep that in mind) from hatcheries or production lines. This is not the time nor place for show quality lines and just breed them together. You will have to be very very good at keeping records on weights ( weighing birds at least once a week, up to four times a week) the chicks would need some type of ID on each from ~1-3 days. As you might have figured out this is why very very few people own broilers. Also there are traits that I have not mention like feather and skin colour and growth uniformity.