Yes! Whichever you can find. Dark Cornish will make more of a yellow skin.I hear crossing a Marans with a Dark Cornish is a good cross as well.
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Yes! Whichever you can find. Dark Cornish will make more of a yellow skin.I hear crossing a Marans with a Dark Cornish is a good cross as well.
I know that if you finish cattle with grain the way it is typically done, the meat/fat will have a more negative effect on heart health than grass fed cattle. Grass fed cattle have a lot more heart-healthy fats than typical grain-finished cattle. The same thing holds true for farmed fish, which don't have nearly the amounts of Omega 3 fatty acids that wild-caught fish do, even salmon. I would think that would translate to chickens as well.Have you guys looked into finishing?
For the Bresse, at 4 months, I penned them and fed them milk soaked grains(Organic Kamut) in the morning and flock raiser in the evening for two weeks. They were nice and meaty fat at 18 weeks that way.
I think with the cattle it is the corn that causes the problem. I would use Organic wheat or Kamut. Milk soaked grains is the traditional way of finishing Bresse.I know that if you finish cattle with grain the way it is typically done, the meat/fat will have a more negative effect on heart health than grass fed cattle. Grass fed cattle have a lot more heart-healthy fats than typical grain-finished cattle. The same thing holds true for farmed fish, which don't have nearly the amounts of Omega 3 fatty acids that wild-caught fish do, even salmon. I would think that would translate to chickens as well.
One of my reasons for wanting to raise chickens for meat as opposed to just culling the few cockerels I end up with from the straight-run chicks I buy is the more healthful quality to the meat.
I'm sure that if you raise the Cornish X birds so they move around and forage, they will also produce meat that is much more healthy for you than the mush you buy in a grocery store.
They never had the meat qualities we think they did.Hi ROn!
I don't want a bird as fast growing as the cornishX, but it seems from all the in fo I have gathered that even the heritage birds have not been kept up for their meat qualities.
ie. Math Ace tried several lines of speckled sussex, and finally bought a very nice SQ line. Even those lacked the muscling that was expected. Letting her see if they develop anything of value before getting chicks/eggs from her.
Ron why maran x dorking? My marans are much smaller than my light sussex. THe cuckoo marans is a broad bird. My meatiest is a hatchery hybrid rooster ( a 3 breed cross)
I have been scouting out who has the better meat type birds, and it is few and far between. Even on the heritage thread much talk is about continueing to improve the birds. I am always concerned about meat qualities when SOP becomes the sole focus. Maybe I need to pose this Q to Walt as he handles so many birds.
Marans taste good and Dorkings taste better!Hi ROn!
Ron why maran x dorking? My marans are much smaller than my light sussex. THe cuckoo marans is a broad bird. My meatiest is a hatchery hybrid rooster ( a 3 breed cross)
Ron,Marans taste good and Dorkings taste better!
The cross is amazing and fast growing--they beat the pre 1940s growth rate I posted above.
Yes!Ron,
So is 8# 3oz a decent live weight for a 25 week capon?
Did you see the picture of my Marans/Lavender Orpington capon a few posts back?Yes!
I did see them. They look very nice and I bet they will be very tasty.Did you see the picture of my Marans/Lavender Orpington capon a few posts back?