Processing Day Support Group ~ HELP us through the Emotions PLEASE!

I stumbled upon this thread and read about three or four pages and had to post something. It probably has been said somewhere in these 160+ pages but...
When I was young (i am 33 now) my dad always complained about how "animal" lovers treated their pets and so forth. We are hunters so we are very ethically minded but my dad just didn't get the "spoiled pet" thing. (I don't either but...) When I was 18 I brought home a dog that eventually became my dads dog. He was a pug and basset hound mix. Red in color and big like a basset with a pug face and tail. He owned the dog for about 5 years before the dog developed complications due to diabetes that was to be fatal. My dad, who always complained about "these dumb animals", could not euthenize the dog himself, he couldn't bring himself to do it. I actually took my dad and the dog to the vet so he could be put down and my dad bawled like a 7 year old girl for three days. All this from a man who lived on a farm in his younger years and never had a problem with butchering his own food: deer, turkey, rabbit, squirrel, pigs, cattle...you name it he killed it for food. Strange how the tables turn.

I know it's a little different than killing and eating chickens. My story goes similar: I raised 12 leghorns which 6 turned out to be cockerels. I knew they would have to be butchered and never had an issue with it. When the day came my children all helped with the deed. The hardest part for me was the first bird. Having to put it in the cone and make that first cut took a little pep talk to myself but once I did it I was okay. The kids never had a problem with it because they new from day one that the boys were to be dinner one day. I do wish I was able to keep one of those boys because they were very beautiful and would have been great roosters. They did taste very yummy though. :)

I think it is similar to what I read earlier in this post. I can shoot any wild animal with a bow or gun without a second thought, but when the knife is in your hand and the actual action is inches from you, the implications become much more amplified.
 
Now you wish for it, but then it might have caused you those hysterical fits you said your grandfather was worried about. I knew where my food came from and understood that. My dad hunted a lot, and we bought meat from local farms from animals I knew. I helped butcher deer, but I never forgot those dang bunnies. I couldn't raise bunnies for that now because of it I think. Just made me miserable thinking about their cute little cuddly bodies getting chopped up. Ugh! I mentioned to my husband once that raising bunnies is cheap and easy and tasty and he said NO WAY is he doing bunnies, lol. That's what I figured he'd say though. He grew up on a farm.


You forgot to add processing those cuddly little bits of deliciousness is easier and faster than processing chickens.

Rabbits have a higher feed offset with forage, 85% compared to 15% chickens. Virtually no municipality has restrictions on rabbits like many do with chickens. I find them to be very complimentary to raising pastured poultry. One thing I would caution someone considering pasturing rabbits is to slowly acclimate them to forage. Rabbits which are used to commercial Pelletized feed can experience health problems if given unlimited access to forage immediately. Chickens are better at dealing with stress than rabbits are as a rule also.
 
You forgot to add processing those cuddly little bits of deliciousness is easier and faster than processing chickens.

Rabbits have a higher feed offset with forage, 85% compared to 15% chickens. Virtually no municipality has restrictions on rabbits like many do with chickens. I find them to be very complimentary to raising pastured poultry. One thing I would caution someone considering pasturing rabbits is to slowly acclimate them to forage. Rabbits which are used to commercial Pelletized feed can experience health problems if given unlimited access to forage immediately. Chickens are better at dealing with stress than rabbits are as a rule also.
AND they taste like...wait for it.........CHICKEN, lol.
 
I stumbled upon this thread and read about three or four pages and had to post something. It probably has been said somewhere in these 160+ pages but...
When I was young (i am 33 now) my dad always complained about how "animal" lovers treated their pets and so forth. We are hunters so we are very ethically minded but my dad just didn't get the "spoiled pet" thing. (I don't either but...) When I was 18 I brought home a dog that eventually became my dads dog. He was a pug and basset hound mix. Red in color and big like a basset with a pug face and tail. He owned the dog for about 5 years before the dog developed complications due to diabetes that was to be fatal. My dad, who always complained about "these dumb animals", could not euthenize the dog himself, he couldn't bring himself to do it. I actually took my dad and the dog to the vet so he could be put down and my dad bawled like a 7 year old girl for three days. All this from a man who lived on a farm in his younger years and never had a problem with butchering his own food: deer, turkey, rabbit, squirrel, pigs, cattle...you name it he killed it for food. Strange how the tables turn.

I know it's a little different than killing and eating chickens. My story goes similar: I raised 12 leghorns which 6 turned out to be cockerels. I knew they would have to be butchered and never had an issue with it. When the day came my children all helped with the deed. The hardest part for me was the first bird. Having to put it in the cone and make that first cut took a little pep talk to myself but once I did it I was okay. The kids never had a problem with it because they new from day one that the boys were to be dinner one day. I do wish I was able to keep one of those boys because they were very beautiful and would have been great roosters. They did taste very yummy though. :)

I think it is similar to what I read earlier in this post. I can shoot any wild animal with a bow or gun without a second thought, but when the knife is in your hand and the actual action is inches from you, the implications become much more amplified.
You sound like my husband. When we were preparing to process our first meat chickens, my husband said that he would shoot them for me, but he wasn't sure he could kill it up close, especially since we had raised it. He tried to make me think that he was just joking, but I knew that he really felt that way. I told him that we should get a killing cone, but he thought the axe and the tree stump would be best.

After he killed the first two, he determined the killing cone might not be a bad idea, so we made two. Now he is more content.....he holds their feet so they don't flop out of the cone, so guess who bleeds them????? Yep.....you guessed it!
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Okay - someone please clarify the following for me because my husband and I are currently in a "discussion" about this and I don't have the patience at the moment to research the answer...

Is it mandatory (as in very heavily advised) to rest the chickens for a day or more after you process them before you eat them? Or can you eat one same day as processing?
 
Okay - someone please clarify the following for me because my husband and I are currently in a "discussion" about this and I don't have the patience at the moment to research the answer...

Is it mandatory (as in very heavily advised) to rest the chickens for a day or more after you process them before you eat them? Or can you eat one same day as processing?

Many folks process and cook that day.

Hmmm. That was not the "right" answer, but thank you.
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It is recommended for best texture. You can freeze and then thaw later--that does the same thing as resting.

Was that answer closer?

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Many folks process and cook that day.
okay,
i have processed a ;lot of birds.you and your husband are both right. can you eat a chicken right after slaughter.technically the answer is yes. if you do not know how to cook it right you are in for the toughest chicken you ever ate . you should let the bird go through a resting time. the resting time is when the rigor passes and the fibers of the meat become relaxed. it is recommended you let the chicken rest for min of 24 hrs. i let mine sit 2-3 days before i eat or freeze. the chicken we butcher is fresh so it will stay good for longer then one you purchase at a grocery store.
tell your husband to butcher a bird and cook it like a normal bird you buy at a store. then you will win that argument. another trick to win the argument is the happy wife happy life guide for men.
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