Illinois...

I let turkeys rest at least 3 days, up to 10, usually ends up as a week for me. Traditionally the weekend before thanksgiving is when to process them.
They are the same as a chicken as far as butchering.. except for size and the boys have the beard spot on the breast that may have to be cut off. I put electrical tape around their ankles and gently hold their feet with my foot, to keep them in one spot. I say a prayer and thank them as I use a long handle game shear to lop off their head as they are looking around wondering what is going on. Some people cut a hole in the corner off a feed bag, stick the head through to contain them and may hoist them up to slit the arteries. Sone just hoist them up by the legs, but look out for the wings flapping. Those wings can give you a bloody nose or poke out an eye in death throes. I have taped the wings down, but it seems like it stress them, so I just step back after I lop off the head. They do flop all over the yard if not contained or hanging. So I make sure they have room.

I use a turkey fryer pot to scaled them in. I never could get the burner to stay on to keep the water at 145f to 165f, It either was too hot or the unit shut off. Need to have a person to keep it at the right temp. So I turn the house water heater all the way up and it gets to 165f. I have a yardbird plucker and it is a little small for a turkey. If I take the neck and feet off it does a decent job.

I had turkeys raised in 3 different coops this year. The last 2 years I had them in 2 coops and the ones in the 8x8 coop moved over with the ones in the 8x24 coop. This year one girl stayed in an 8x8 coop and her sister move in the big coop, as did the 4 in the other 8x8. Not sure what is going on with her, but when she does go over to the big coop, she get chased around and cries to go back to the other poultry yard. So she has chosen to live with chickens.
They say hens dress out around 6-8 lbs, I haven't processed any heritage hens yet. First year I had too many hens.

Yesterday 8 turkeys were ganging up on roos and really went after poor "Dinner" They didn't get a chance to hurt him since I heard the ruckus and went to see. So this morning I harvested 2 jakes just a few days shy of 6 months. I had planned on Harvesting at 6 months or when they started causing troubles.
they were about 12 lbs dressed. I was going to do a 2 wk younger 3rd jake but it started raining half way through the 2nd. Last year I waited until around Easter and the Jake was around 17lbs.
Most of my family is out of state. I am giving one to my cousin who doesn't do Holidays, ... Jehovah witness thing... but has the family gatherings whenever fixings are on sale. So she doesn't care if it's early. I part them out for myself so I don't care either.
@Molpet
To eat a fresh turkey on Thanksgiving Day, when is the best day to process?

Is the processing the same as a chicken? Any advice or websites or instructional videos to recommend?

Also, I have 3 turkeys. The male is going to a friend for possible breeding purposes. One female = Thanksgiving. The other female will be Christmas. I wouldn't mind growing her out a little more, but would the loneliness be too much for her? Her early life was spent with chickens but for the past month, I've been keeping them in the tractor 24/7. (Too much of a flying risk- even with a clipped wing.) Not sure if she'd be OK either by herself or in the coop. If it would be too stressful for her, I'd rather process both at the same time.

Molpet -
Re: turkey troubles!

As for when to process your turkeys for Thanksgiving - Check over on the meat bird section of the forums...I know I've seen this over there before (usually about this time). If memory is accurate, turkeys take a bit longer to rest than a chicken...maybe another day? And there are LOTS of cooking suggestions over there to get the most flavor out of your hard efforts!

As for flock management, I very much try to keep the birds I present on my table as happy as possible. So if the Tom is going to a new home, I'd wait to process the ladies until after he leaves (so he's not alone)...and I'd process both together. Mostly because one never knows what's going to happen (predator attack, she takes off and flies away, she gets henpecked by the chickens...whatever!).

It's been a long time since we watched youtube for processing support...I know there's more out there now. So sorry, cannot suggest anything specific...just know a bunch of them are educational but hilarious too!

All I can say is good luck and I'll be watching on the day after Thanksgiving to see how it all went!
 
We got our new pup yesterday. A German Shepherd (mom) & Plott Hound mix (dad). He misses his siblings but otherwise is fitting in. He's very curious about the chickens. The chickens completely panicked when we walked him through the backyard on a leash. The yard is already divided into dog & chicken zones, but I hope with training, they'll get along. He's definitely a cuddler, loves everyone he meets, and simply wants to be with us. We're crate training him, so last night was long. He cried for 1hr20min at bedtime & then stopped. When DH used the toilet at 1am, he found the pup running loose. Now we know why he stopped crying. Locked him back up & again he cried for a little over an hour. When we woke up this morning, he was out again. We like the name Kepler (after Johannes Kepler/ laws of planetary motion) because he stays near & orbits us. However after last nights double break out, Houdini may be another option.

Here's our handsome new boy (17 weeks old):
family.jpg IMG_3164 copy.jpg IMG_3176 copy.jpg
IMG_3170 copy.jpg
puppy bw.jpg
 
We got our new pup yesterday. A German Shepherd (mom) & Plott Hound mix (dad). He misses his siblings but otherwise is fitting in. He's very curious about the chickens. The chickens completely panicked when we walked him through the backyard on a leash. The yard is already divided into dog & chicken zones, but I hope with training, they'll get along. He's definitely a cuddler, loves everyone he meets, and simply wants to be with us. We're crate training him, so last night was long. He cried for 1hr20min at bedtime & then stopped. When DH used the toilet at 1am, he found the pup running loose. Now we know why he stopped crying. Locked him back up & again he cried for a little over an hour. When we woke up this morning, he was out again. We like the name Kepler (after Johannes Kepler/ laws of planetary motion) because he stays near & orbits us. However after last nights double break out, Houdini may be another option.

Here's our handsome new boy (17 weeks old):
View attachment 1582058 View attachment 1582059 View attachment 1582062
View attachment 1582060 View attachment 1582063
so glad you got a new dog.. he's a cutie
 
I let turkeys rest at least 3 days, up to 10, usually ends up as a week for me. Traditionally the weekend before thanksgiving is when to process them.
They are the same as a chicken as far as butchering.. except for size and the boys have the beard spot on the breast that may have to be cut off. I put electrical tape around their ankles and gently hold their feet with my foot, to keep them in one spot. I say a prayer and thank them as I use a long handle game shear to lop off their head as they are looking around wondering what is going on. Some people cut a hole in the corner off a feed bag, stick the head through to contain them and may hoist them up to slit the arteries. Sone just hoist them up by the legs, but look out for the wings flapping. Those wings can give you a bloody nose or poke out an eye in death throes. I have taped the wings down, but it seems like it stress them, so I just step back after I lop off the head. They do flop all over the yard if not contained or hanging. So I make sure they have room.

I use a turkey fryer pot to scaled them in. I never could get the burner to stay on to keep the water at 145f to 165f, It either was too hot or the unit shut off. Need to have a person to keep it at the right temp. So I turn the house water heater all the way up and it gets to 165f. I have a yardbird plucker and it is a little small for a turkey. If I take the neck and feet off it does a decent job.

I had turkeys raised in 3 different coops this year. The last 2 years I had them in 2 coops and the ones in the 8x8 coop moved over with the ones in the 8x24 coop. This year one girl stayed in an 8x8 coop and her sister move in the big coop, as did the 4 in the other 8x8. Not sure what is going on with her, but when she does go over to the big coop, she get chased around and cries to go back to the other poultry yard. So she has chosen to live with chickens.
They say hens dress out around 6-8 lbs, I haven't processed any heritage hens yet. First year I had too many hens.

Yesterday 8 turkeys were ganging up on roos and really went after poor "Dinner" They didn't get a chance to hurt him since I heard the ruckus and went to see. So this morning I harvested 2 jakes just a few days shy of 6 months. I had planned on Harvesting at 6 months or when they started causing troubles.
they were about 12 lbs dressed. I was going to do a 2 wk younger 3rd jake but it started raining half way through the 2nd. Last year I waited until around Easter and the Jake was around 17lbs.
Most of my family is out of state. I am giving one to my cousin who doesn't do Holidays, ... Jehovah witness thing... but has the family gatherings whenever fixings are on sale. So she doesn't care if it's early. I part them out for myself so I don't care either.

so I did the 3rd jake and a cockerel today. The jake was 11 and 1/2 lbs hatched 5/26
The ones from yesterday were over 12 lbs and hatched 5/9. Todays cockerel was over 6 lbs hatched 5/26, hatched by the same broody as todays jake.
 
Last edited:
@Faraday40
So glad to see that your family got a Dog. I know how it is, a void when you had the 2 and lost them both.:(
Am sure you children :lovehim.
As I was reading your post and before I got to the end,,,,,,,,, I already was thinking of suggesting Houdini. Then it was there. ;)
May I suggest a first name and a surname. Kepler Houdini,,,,, :idunno:old
 
I don’t have anything yet. We just bought our house, and will have to decide where to put things and prepare for them...that should keep me busy for the winter. I’d like bees and ducks and goats!
Congrats on the new home! Now is a great time to discover what types of poultry to fill up that new coop! I always liked goats.... but they wouldn't be a good fit in my suburban neighborhood. (Maybe someday I'll get my dream 3-5 acres and be able to get goats.)
 
:hit

Brutal hawk attack today took the life of my Cream Crested Legbar. Although not a flock fav, she was nicknamed Dolores after my mom. (There's a family story involved there, but since my mom is no longer living, I guess I was keeping the hen around for the memories.) She was a beautiful hen, with rich color, & always striking a pose. She laid pretty sky blue eggs & with my EE, They earned blue ribbons at the county fair for the past 4 years. My EE is 6 yrs old, so I highly doubt we'll be able to gather a whole dozen from her alone.

RIP my sweet little hen.
IMG_6860 copy - Copy.jpg
IMG_6868 copy - Copy.jpg
IMG_6877 copy.jpg
IMG_7859.JPG
IMG_1931 copy.jpg IMG_3390 copy.jpg IMG_1294 copy.jpg
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom