My first Meat birds

MolsonMiller

Hatching
7 Years
Jun 17, 2012
3
0
7
SE Michigan
Just wanted to report what happened on our first meat bird experiment. We got 30 one day old chicks and started our journey. I thought it was ambitious for our first time, but said why not...

We put the chicks in boxes with wood shavings under heat lamps indoors. At two weeks they went outside to the coop with heat lamps also. At about 3.5 weeks, we put them in our pasture with our two goats (Conway and Loretta). They seemed to like it out there and roamed pretty well. We did not do the 12 on 12 off free choice feed, but kept them fed pretty regularly throughout the day with 20% Kalmback feed.

At about 7 weeks one developed a limp, so he was the first to get processed. This was also my first attempt at processing chickens, although I have a lot of experience processing various types of game.

We miscalculated the age of our birds and were planning on having them processed at 8 weeks, so basically, at 6 weeks they were really 8 weeks. Once we figured this out, we tried to arrange processing, but they were all 2 weeks back logged, so I took the challenge to do all 27 (Oh I did cull one of the birds who had a huge crop and body was very skinny.)

We just finished vacuum selaing today and out of 30 birds, we have 28 in the freezer. The average weight was about 6 lbs dressed.

All in all, I think it was a good experience and we have a lot of good quality, pastured chicken in the freezer. I think we're going to do another 30-50 in a couple months. I may invest in a plucker though. haha

I wish I had kept better reords of exactly how much feed, weights at verious ages, etc. So i could know what to do the same or different.
 
You must be tired and hot!! I made a plucker that attaches to my drill and it works great!! And cheap to make!!!
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Congratulations! It's so satisfying putting all that homegrown meat in the freezer, isn't it? :)

We processed 21 today. We started about 8:30 and completed all cleanup at 12:30. That was a huge improvement from our first try from a few months ago.......22 birds, started at 8:30, finished at 5:30!!! The plucker made all the difference for us!
 
Thanks, It is very satisfying. I was considering doing a drill attached plucker, but didn't know if they would do the job very well, or would there still be a lot of clean up after...

I'm considering building a whiz bang, but after reading the posts of the ez plucker, it might be worth just buying that one straight away.
 
My husband started with a drill plucker - it didn't work well. We've since discovered that it probably had more to do with our scald than the plucker. After that very, long day we decided to finish the Whiz bang......but would you believe someone had a picwik plucker on craigslist - the very next day! - for a great price. It's been wonderful!
 
You must be tired and hot!! I made a plucker that attaches to my drill and it works great!! And cheap to make!!!
smile.png
Could you please explain how you made this? I am umm what you call cheap hehe and if I can make something instead of buying I will. I am soon getting ready to process some ducks and geese and chickens and if I can find a way to make it easier and quicker all for it thanks. May God Bless You.
 
After plucking all our butchered birds by hand for several years I decided to buy the drill attachment thinking finally this will make butchering so much easier... NOT...lol. Atleast for me , and I admit I am not the most co-ordinated person but it frustrated me more and seemed to slow me down. I have no idea what I did with that attachment but it was not for me.

I watched a youtube video of the picwik plucker online and the first thing I thought of was OMG I would drop the bird and the whole thing would jam up. Not to mention I can't see me wearing a slicker in 90* weather...lol.
 
Thanks, It is very satisfying. I was considering doing a drill attached plucker, but didn't know if they would do the job very well, or would there still be a lot of clean up after...

I'm considering building a whiz bang, but after reading the posts of the ez plucker, it might be worth just buying that one straight away.

I would love to have a tub-style plucker, but it seems like a big expense for as few birds as we process.

Instead I bought a drill-style plucker from Heritage Ways Farm and that worked _much_ better than hand plucking. There was no need to singe off the hairs, the plucker got them.

We are now discussing a better way of mounting it, in a cabinet with a hole in the top, so it works like one of these: http://www.strombergschickens.com/p...le-poultry-picker-with-motor/Poultry-Pluckers .

(Of course there is still cleanup... feathers everywhere! I can't see how that would be any different with a tub style plucker, the feathers have to go somewhere.)

-Wendy
 

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