WOW! I wish I could keep up with even a sixteenth of what you do. Please tell me that you do not work outside of the home and farm. If you do I’m gonna fall over dead.Experiment until you find the methods that work the best for you. For us, we need a minimum of 72 a year, so I need to hatch 140 to get them (assuming it's 50/50 gender split). The girls move forward for the next generation or are sold to offset the feed bill. I aim for setting at least 50 eggs at a time and I'm not even trying to have enough broodies to do that. We upgraded to a cabinet incubator so that I can set by the tray or shelf for staggered hatches in the same unit, hatching in table tops separately.
It will be at least 16 weeks before a Heritage cockerel can be processed (about 3lbs bone in), which essentially is half as much for twice as long when compared to a CornishX.
We've been able to break even on the birds for the last 2 years. Our feed bill is about $300/month during grow out season. We eat like kings. I usually run a flock total of about 50 chickens and 10 Turkeys in the off season.
I tried it with minimum hens and I wasn't getting enough eggs within a 1 week period to set a large enough batch to fill rooster coop in one set. Staggered ages can get problematic if they're too far apart. So I aim for a setting of 50, to get 25-ish boys to fill rooster coop in one hatch. I then get 5 girls to keep for next year and 20 to sell, which feeds the boys until processing age.
We grow out about 12 Turkeys a year and sell the rest, that goes towards maintaining the adults and grow out expense.
We have a rooster coop with pasture for 25, 3 brooders for those young enough to need heat (space for 50 <4wks), 2 juvenile stalls, 7 stalls/runs for 2 Turkey varieties and 5 chicken chicken flocks (space for up to 14 Turkeys and 60 chickens), 2 flex pens (157 sq ft) and 3 9x6 pasture tractors for overflow boys.
It's become a cycle of hatch, grow, sort, process/sell and repeat.
Our goal was to not buy chicken at the store at all... that's the scale we've found in order to do that and gain enough sales to offset the feed bill. I don't ship at all, totally local.
We could do it the easy way and just drive 30 minutes to Mt Healthy Hatchery and pick up a box of 25 meat birds 3 times a year. I always complicate things though. Plus the flavor difference. Plus the fact that we wouldn't see any return on the feed expense.
Even though I live in the country where a lot of folks process their own food, I’m sure there are plenty of people around who would buy processed birds, but I’m not sure I could sell ice water in he!!. For whatever reason I feel like I’m intruding or imposing on them. However, if word ever got out I’m sure they’d be knocking at my door.