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LilyS
Songster
- Jun 8, 2020
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It's the state I live in. In the USWhose Oregon?
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It's the state I live in. In the USWhose Oregon?
I'm going to try. I tried to give him away before he was mean cause we had six roosters but now he's just a problem.Whose Oregon?
Oh, sorry. I know that. The wording if the sentence was just confusing. Hmmm. I know this sounds absurd, but could you catch him in a cage and put him on a table at the end of your driveway or something saying free rooster?It's the state I live in. In the US
We only have a big gun so that might not be a good idea. How else could I do this? Do people really just swing them around by the head?If you're in town you probably can't do this, but I had to put down a few mean roosters and I just catch them and calm them down so they aren't moving and shoot them in the head with a .22 pistol. They won't feel a thing, destroying the brain is the most humane IMHO.
If you're in town you will probably have to advertise on Facebook and maybe Craigslist "free mean rooster".
I'm sorry you gave to go through this, the first time is always the hardest, I'll flat out admit I cried.
Honestly I hope it never gets easy. I love my birds and respect their lives, but I also know that for them to be happy we can't have too many males, and my family needs a humane source of chicken, so I do what I gotta do.I'm sorry you gave to go through this, the first time is always the hardest, I'll flat out admit I cried.
Just curious because I can't tell, what's the difference between the two loppers?If you look on the meat bird forum you'll find a number of excellent posts about how to cull.
My preference so far is the broomstick method -- cervical dislocation is instant death (though the flapping reaction, which is caused by the severed nerves, is disconcerting). For the branch lopper method you need the BYPASS type of loppers, not the anvil sort.
This,
View attachment 2665850
NOT this,
View attachment 2665844
For me the broomstick is physically easier but for many people the loppers are mentally-easier because no head = certainty that the death was quick.
Just curious because I can't tell, what's the difference between the two loppers?
Ahh, okay that makes sense then. I know we use scissors for quail, which fits into thatThe first is bypass -- the blades shear past each other.
The second is anvil -- one sharp blade cuts against a blunt, fixed surface (some anvil loppers ratchet).
For branch lopping each has it's specific advantages, but if you want to cut a chicken's head off you need bypass to get a clean, fast cut.![]()