its a great thread topicHoly cow everyone. Thank you for all this info!
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
its a great thread topicHoly cow everyone. Thank you for all this info!
ahh gotcha thanks so much for the informative informationChickens that have been bred specifically to get full butcher weight in a bout six to eight weeks. Cornish cross or similar....
Same goes for broad brested Turkeys...they will get so large they will break their legs just trying to walk about... So they Have to be butchered. you cant keep them as pets.... A friend of mine had to give his away because he couldnt butcher it.... it was 65 lbs.
Both grow so large they have problems with organ failure or cracked bones because of the weight they attain. And no they are not genetically altered except by years of breeding.
deb
whats a franken chicken?
ahh gotcha thanks so much for the informative informationI was thinking of running a chicken tractor this spring with a mes of those chickens to feed up n fill my freezer
Quote:
there is a thread here about raising them on fermented feed and allowing them to free range so they are less Franken Chicken like.
For some reason I am not getting emails from BYC.... So I have to investigate this.
deb
I'm going mainly by memory of stuff I've read and I don't have any personal experience, but if I remember correctly, you need to get the skin off as quick as possibly. It should then be preserved with salt, if you intend to have someone else tan it. I don't know if the salting step is necessary if you do it yourself. The brain can be used for the tanning, and if I remember correctly, willow bark is somehow usually incorporated into the process too. To affect the color, you can use coffee or tea or other stuff. I've re-tanned leather with coffee to make it darker. Give's it a little more aged look, but that was already processed leather.My dad hunts and usually shoots 1-2 deer a year, I am interested in trying to tan the hides this year if he gets any. Question I have is, everything I see says you should skin them out while the body is still warm if you want to preserve the hide? Is this true? We always gut the deer and let it hang a day or 2, always overnight, before we skin it and chunk it up for processing. The hide keeps the meat clean while it hangs so I wouldn't want to skin it and leave a naked corpse hanging... Any ideas?