My Cornish X experiment

luvmybob:

You could be right, hopefully they will turn into waddlers in a couple weeks. ( boy spell check sure hates the word waddler)..

It is amazing how fast these meat birds can run.....

I hope by the time I butcher I can tell the boys from the girls. I can tell some boys now, but the girls are harder to tell.




I am going to continue this experiment of mine next year. I plan (if I get CX eggs) to hatch a group of Cx's and buy a group on the same day. I want to see how the babies compare in growth health etc. I want to see if I can become more self sufficient and not buy chicks. I would love to be able to raise almost everything I need on my little 13 acres.
 
My little chicks are no longer little!

I am starting to tell some that are rooster Now if I can only tell the hens.

I am thinking of taking 4 of the smallest and saving them for spring.

I know it is counter to what I would like to accomplish, but I think the smaller ones have a better chance to make it to spring.

I would like to keep the bigger, but am afraid of the losses and the possibility the rooster could not breed in the spring. Keeping the bigger is the trait I want, but, sometimes we have to make allowances.


I think I will keep the 4 in a tractor and run over winter, just so I can limit their food. I hope they survive winters are rough here.
 
Last edited:

Well the CX genes are quite strong, even when using a Barred Rock over a CX hen I get results that look very similar in structure to a store bought CX, but of course slower. I think one more generation and I can get it to 12 weeks butchering.


at 16 weeks


at 7 weeks


7 weeks


I moved this to my thread I hope you do not mind Aoxa.

I wanted to comment but know luvmybob does not want this conversation on her thread,


If you got this size chicken from a barred rock cross, I can only wonder what a cross to a rainbow or another CX would produce... Nice job..
 
Last edited:
If anyone wants to comment on what happens when 2 CX's breed and what the offspring is feel free too, However I ask you not call names or become condescending. Try to be gentle.

In the end I will be breeding a hatch of CX's if I can get the chicks through the winter.
 
They look just like mine... I am guessing some are close to 4-5 lbs now. But they are not waddling are having trouble walking at all. I am so happy with them. If I want to catch one I have to run! And for a fat old man that is a lot of work..

How old are they? They really pack it on the last 2 weeks or so. You might confine them the last 2 weeks. To tenderize the meat and allow the energy they expend playing to go toward meat. This is what I have observed, not experience you understand.
lau.gif
 
Last edited:
My little chicks are no longer little!

I am starting to tell some that are rooster Now if I can only tell the hens.

I am thinking of taking 4 of the smallest and saving them for spring.

I know it is counter to what I would like to accomplish, but I think the smaller ones have a better chance to make it to spring.

I would like to keep the bigger, but am afraid of the losses and the possibility the rooster could not breed in the spring. Keeping the bigger is the trait I want, but, sometimes we have to make allowances.


I think I will keep the 4 in a tractor and run over winter, just so I can limit their food. I hope they survive winters are rough here.

It's definitely worth a shot. Try it. Then report back. Keep your thread going.
frow.gif


edited: I'll be breeding a very, very large White Plymouth Rock cockerel with my CX's that I get and try to get something going on them. I'll let you know how that turned out.
 
Last edited:
It's definitely worth a shot. Try it. Then report back. Keep your thread going.
frow.gif


edited: I'll be breeding a very, very large White Plymouth Rock cockerel with my CX's that I get and try to get something going on them. I'll let you know how that turned out.

That sounds great......Now if I could just get those big butts and legs I want! ( ok thighs not butts)..
 
Linda My chicks were hatched on August First at the hatchery, I got them 2 days later.

They have been raised on lower protein limited feed. I am just now starting to give them unlimited feed, but they have such good eating habits they are not over eating or sitting in their own poop and scarfing down food!

I just saw an amazing sight, all my birds are under cover, lying about like me on a lazy Sunday afternoon. I throw them scraps now an then.

Yesterday I started a batch of Headcheese, I know some of you will vomit at the thought of it, but I like it.

I boiled the heads all day yesterday and picked the meat off last night. I threw the bones fat and stuff I do not use in the finished product to the chicks. They really picked the bones and fat over. I think they ate half the fat and cleaned the skulls! Now they are full and resting, all of them. I doubt there was a lot of protein in what they got, but they sure filled up on fat.

I have my birds in a pen now, they have been there for about 2 weeks, since my fur bearing predator attack and my needing to go to my sons in Iowa for a few days. With the cooling weather I do not think I will free range them again. Their pen is huge for the 23 birds I have left. It is about 100ft by 100ft, with lots of play things and cover. They are very happy , I think.
 
Brutus was just asking me today:

How do people feel entering a "best rooster of the world" contest and knowing they will get their behinds kicked by a 3 month old rooster....


( I did not have the heart to tell Brutus it was just a comb contest).



I had no answer for him. I simply told him it was in the bag.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom