Pretty personal trainer bunny !

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Pretty personal trainer bunny !
shawn,Somebody tell me why I should try a batch of Cornish. I have raised hundreds of Freedom Rangers but thought about some Cornish. Can you raise them in 6 weeks during the winter since they don't range anyway?
Shawn
An old time bird man told me about the confining at the end and finish the birds on the corn oat mix,,,,,just my .02
the cornish x produce a lot of body heat. so they will be fine. it is not all important to use medicated feed. i am sure i will get a rash of complaints from this comment. if you are using fermented feed and apple cider vinegar this will create an environment within the bird that is not comfortable for parasites to thrive. i never medicate. if i wanted medication in my food, i would buy a store bought chicken. high protein feed is made to copy broiler house operations. it is very hard on the birds making the organs work harder. the birds in fact will grow faster and can be brought to slaughter earlier but at what expense. the bird will not be healthy. you will lose birds from broken bones and organ failure.Thanks, Bruce, I appreciate the advice ! The birds are not on medicated feed either. I have a problem with medicating anything that is not sick. The whole purpose in raising our own food is NOT to use anything that is not natural or has antibiotics ! If we eat animals that have been eating medicated food, we are being medicated and if we get sick it will take stronger and stronger antibiotics and longer to get well ! The chicks are changing from yellow to white feathering and coming along nicely. Since we got all females, we know it will take a couple of week longer, so we will keep posting. I plan to put them into the barn at 3 weeks and start them on ACV and FF then. They will be inside the barn, and inside a 10'x10' chain link fence type dog kennel. I hope I can acclimate them to the 40 something night temps we are getting by then. I have found that the hot weather temps. here in Southern Louisiana are harder on these little fatties tan is the cooler temps and with 50 of them plus the other flocks in the barn, there should be enough body temperature to keep them warm. In November the days can get well into the 80's while the nights drop to 40's, so we will see.
remember these meat birds are roosters we are culling,,,not CX
interesting to see you caponizing something I want to try at some point. how old were the birds when you did it?
caponizing a cornish x will produce you a big bird in a short time with the most juiciest self basting chicken you can find. the bird will turn out so good the next time you order you will want all males. you got my mouth watering.Yes, I have both Cuckoo Marans and CX. I may try to caponize a few CX. I'm curious what happens when you caponize them. I can't imagine that there will be much of a benefit to warrant the operation, but I am curious.
I did a ton of research and tried to find SOMEONE with caponizing experience. Got a caponizing kit on eBay and practiced on a few culled roos first. I have processed a lot of chickens, but it is different working on a live bird.
I think the birds I've caponized ranged in age from 4 to 10 weeks. The oldest one was the most difficult -- the cockerels get stronger as they get older and he was fiesty. About 1 pound is the best size for the tools I have. I strongly suggest a headlamp flashlight that straps to your head. The most difficult is seeing INTO a small incision. I bought a 70 lumen one by Energizer ($20) and it works great for caponizing AND for checking the yard for predators at night! Taking pictures and/or filming the caponizing procedure is difficult because of the small incision and how dark it is inside the chicks. I still have to make 2 incisions, but I am working on increasing my speed and eventually want to get both "jewels" from one side.
I don't always starve the cockerels beforehand. It is more difficult when the intestines are full, but a hungry roo is an unhappy, struggling roo. Ideally, I'd make them fast 24 hours (with water but no food), feed them so their crops are full and then caponize them. Empty intestines, full crop = calmer bird -- it's just a theory at this point.
I like doing something useful with the extra cockerels.