Naked Neck/Turken Thread

5EC4BFCD-6FFC-4355-BD32-16C1D713E8FE.jpeg 06264F09-9A72-4170-B298-AB1761B782EA.jpeg @igorsMistress I plan to process my cockerels but not until they are doing their job with the ladies so I have more babies and keep the process going. My last Cockerel was 20 weeks and he dressed out at almost 5 lbs and I have 36 growing in the incubator. I’m sure if you are going to process all of them you can feed them grower feed or game bird chow to fatten them up faster.
 
View attachment 1228578 View attachment 1228579 @igorsMistress I plan to process my cockerels but not until they are doing their job with the ladies so I have more babies and keep the process going. My last Cockerel was 20 weeks and he dressed out at almost 5 lbs and I have 36 growing in the incubator. I’m sure if you are going to process all of them you can feed them grower feed or game bird chow to fatten them up faster.
That is a beautiful cockerel!!! If you're willing, I'd like to get some hatching eggs from you this spring... maybe March or April?
 
I have a few questions for those of you that raise NNs for meat. I think I've got my husband convinced to raise a few :yesss:

I've never raised chickens for meat and I know there's an age range for broiler, fryer etc. Is that supposed to be the same for dual purpose chickens though? How old do you let them get before you butcher? Do you feed them differently because you're going to eat them rather than use for eggs?
Sorry, I have no clue what I'm doing.:oops:


I've only rarely butchered any of my birds at 14 weeks, but I like nice big carcasses and rich, flavorful meat. My favorite butchering age for cockerels is right around 20 weeks because by that time they typically have really nice carcasses. One thing to keep in mind is that not only will their bodies be longer than store-bought chickens (as previously mentioned by @cactusrota) but the meat will be darker and richer as well. The dark meat will nearly be the color of steak many times, and the white breast meat will be closer to the color of dark meat in store bought chickens. And you will actually learn what chicken truly tastes like. ;)

All of my birds are raised on gamebird feed for the first few weeks of their life, and then I switch them to broiler feed until about 8-10 weeks of age, then down to 18% protein grower feed until about 18 weeks of age, at which point they go on layer feed. Even when penned, NNs will be leaner and far less fatty than what you may be expecting no matter what you feed them.

You may eventually find that crossing your NNs with other breeds results in a flavor profile you prefer. Don't be afraid to experiment.
 
I've only rarely butchered any of my birds at 14 weeks, but I like nice big carcasses and rich, flavorful meat. My favorite butchering age for cockerels is right around 20 weeks because by that time they typically have really nice carcasses. One thing to keep in mind is that not only will their bodies be longer than store-bought chickens (as previously mentioned by @cactusrota) but the meat will be darker and richer as well. The dark meat will nearly be the color of steak many times, and the white breast meat will be closer to the color of dark meat in store bought chickens. And you will actually learn what chicken truly tastes like. ;)

All of my birds are raised on gamebird feed for the first few weeks of their life, and then I switch them to broiler feed until about 8-10 weeks of age, then down to 18% protein grower feed until about 18 weeks of age, at which point they go on layer feed. Even when penned, NNs will be leaner and far less fatty than what you may be expecting no matter what you feed them.

You may eventually find that crossing your NNs with other breeds results in a flavor profile you prefer. Don't be afraid to experiment.

Thank you so much! Super helpful information. I think we might hatch some eggs in fall when things slow down a bit for us.
 

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