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We use the broomstick method as well. He does not want to do more than one at a time. I think the problem is his strategy. I told him to use a broomstick but he has insisted on using a stick and yesterday was an old broom handle. The stick he apparently misunderstood that both feet must be on the stick when you pull up. Once he figured that out it was done. Yesterday with the old broom handle...it broke. The bird still died but probably not as quickly as planned. I dont know if that is his issue or if it's the removal of the organs that bothers him.It is less personal if you're processing a number of birds at the same time and not just one.
I name my birds things like Dumpling, Noodle, Stew, etc. as a reminder that they are livestock, not pets.
Do you know which aspect of the job bothers him the most?
What bothered me most during the process was the flapping -- I was using the broomstick method so holding a frantically-flapping bird by the ankles was a bit disturbing until I understood that the really STRONG flapping indicated the swiftest, most effective, most merciful killing. We're considering trying killing cones to see if it's more efficient, especially because the arthritis in my wrists is worse now.
You might consider the different methods to see which is the least upsetting.
My husband doesn't want to do the killing himself, but thinks he could handle the other parts.