Processing non-meat breed cockerels

2ndTink

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Before we started raising and processing our own chickens, I couldn't find very much information about raising non-meat breed cockerels for processing. So, here is a little about my experience. I decided I wanted to breed and raise my own chickens for egg laying, but what can you responsibly do with the 50% that hatch boys? Everyone has too many cockerels, the options are to try and give them away locally, take them to a poultry sale, or a poultry auction. Since my chickens are more in the eggs and pets category, I also wanted to be sure the boys have good lives and are treated the best possible. This meant the best option for me was to keep the extra cockerels and process them so I know they were well taken care of, not allowed to be picked off by predators, or left in a situation that meant they were bullied or killed by other chickens, or any of those other bad scenarios I could think of.

Is it worth feeding them for 5 to 6 months? What do you feed them? Does free ranging vs keeping them in a coop matter? Is it even possible to put up with all those boys for long enough to get a decent sized chicken to process?

If you want to raise cockerels as a cheap source of meat, or to sell to "make money", don't bother. Go buy it at the store. But if you are doing it as a means to provide meat for your family, know how they were treated, what they were fed, and how they were processed, plus end up with much more flavorful chickens? 100% do it!

Commercial poultry farms are predominantly Cornish Cross, they are 6 to 10, maybe 12 weeks old when they are processed, typically they are housed in barns and never get to eat grass or a bug or feel the sun shining on their feathers. For better or for worse, they are not allowed to be given antibiotics, even if they desperately need them. Typically the chicks and the feed are provided to the farmer with strict guidelines on what they can and can't have. I have heard stories of thousands of chicks dying per day, that could be saved with a round of antibiotics, but the farmer can't give it to them, they just have to watch them suffer and die, with the ones who live ending up under weight and being an overall financial loss to the farmer. Raising your own, you get to decide the best course of action start to finish, and I like that! Plus, when they are commercially processed, there are several chemicals the birds go through or are sprayed down with throughout the butchering and packaging process, and I'd much rather not consume those residues.

In contrast, the cockerels I raise have lived a pretty posh 5 to 6 month life, running around eating whatever they want in the sun, dust bathing, dancing for the girls through the run fences, and getting to do whatever their little chicken brains want to do. To me, this makes it worth feeding them for the time it takes to get a reasonable sized table bird.

I haven't experimented a ton with feed and how they finish or taste, but I have been doing a non-gmo all flock, and this time I added some organic scratch mixed in the feed the last 2 to 4 weeks. They definitely had a good amount of yellow fat even though they had very active lifestyles. Most of the boys got to free range every day, all day. Another group free ranged about 2 to 4 times a week for several hours each. I couldn't really tell a difference between these two groups. Any overly aggressive boys were penned alone, these ones finished with more fat, and less color to the fat. The boys who got to free range really seem to have healthy organs, the livers are dark and evenly colored, the ones that are caged for the last several weeks don't have that same color, not awful or sickly looking, but not the same deep color as the free ranging cockerels.

Can I put up with all those extra boys until they are processing size? It depends on the day, and the breed. I've found some of the breeds and mixes stay pretty mellow while others have insane hormone rages starting about 12 to 15 weeks old. There are a few mixes we won't hatch going forward due to the consistently aggravating boys they create. Some breeds develop quicker or are just larger than others making one processing date for one hatch a little challenging. Or, you just pick a date and everyone goes even if they are a little smaller than you want.

Most of ours dress out between 2.5 to 3.5 pounds in the 22 to 26 week old range. They are great for low and slow cooking methods.

If you have stuck with me through this ramble so far and have never processed chickens before and are wondering if you should, yes, you should! The first time will be the most challenging, it gets easier after that. The non-meat breeds are slower growing, not your money makers, but they are still a good meat source for you and let's you hatch more chicks each year since you aren't worrying over what to do with all the boys.
 
Great information, thank you! We're considering building a bachelor run for extra males. We plan to start hatching in the spring, and we want to have a plan for any males we can't rehome.
 
Great information, thank you! We're considering building a bachelor run for extra males. We plan to start hatching in the spring, and we want to have a plan for any males we can't rehome.
I think that is perfect, you won't be panicking trying to figure out what to do with the cockerels and you can just enjoy hatching. I always try to distance myself from the cockerels and try not to get attached to any, if any get names I keep it super generic, like what color they are.
 
I think that is perfect, you won't be panicking trying to figure out what to do with the cockerels and you can just enjoy hatching. I always try to distance myself from the cockerels and try not to get attached to any, if any get names I keep it super generic, like what color they are.
I have one right now that was a free extra in my September order. He's a RIR. He currently goes by Soup, and that is his destiny. But he's living a good life, scratching around in the sun and chickening with all the others.
 
For better or for worse, they are not allowed to be given antibiotics, even if they desperately need them.
Check the USDA regulations if you are in the USA. If you are somewhere else I don't know what the regulations are but check your regulations

In the USA a veterinarian's prescription is required to give the commercial meat birds antibiotics and certain withdrawal times are required depending on what the specific antibiotic is before the bird can be slaughtered for meat. And there is testing required to make sure the levels are as low as they are supposed to be.

I'll copy an excerpt and the site I got it from.


Key regulations for poultry antibiotic use
  • Veterinary prescription: Farmers must have a veterinarian's prescription to purchase and use antibiotics that are medically important to human health.
  • Prohibition of growth promotion: The use of these antibiotics for growth promotion or "production purposes" is prohibited. They can only be used to treat or prevent disease.
  • "Withdrawal" period: A mandatory "withdrawal" period is required after an animal is treated with antibiotics to ensure they are out of the bird's system before it is slaughtered.
  • Residue testing: The USDA's FSIS randomly tests poultry at slaughter to ensure that antibiotic residue levels are not above the tolerance level. Products with unacceptable residue levels are removed from the food supply.
  • Veterinary oversight: The FDA's Guidance for Industry #213 requires veterinary oversight for all medically important antibiotics used in food-producing animals.

https://www.google.com/search?q=usd...1Lje4B_QJwgcFMC40LjnIBzE&sclient=gws-wiz-serp

I have heard stories of thousands of chicks dying per day, that could be saved with a round of antibiotics, but the farmer can't give it to them, they just have to watch them suffer and die,
You can read anything on the internet, including stories like this. Sometimes they are total fabrications, sometimes they leave out pertinent details. I have no doubt stuff like this can happen, but it is not because of a total ban on antibiotics, at least in the USA.
 
At my house, we call the human-aggressive or extra cockerels "dinner chickens". As in "watch out for the white dinner chicken, it will get you if you aren't careful". And they only stick around until they are processing age. Especially for the egg layer cockerels, whatever weight they get by processing age is the weight they have. Waiting doesn't help them get larger. I barely get 1-2 lbs of meat off of some of them with white leghorn ancestry. I process them because it's the principle of the thing not to let meat go to waste, and to make space in the coup. It's really not worth the time I spend on it - a CX or even an RIR or NH is more worthy of my processing time than a little 2-3 lb carcass Whiting true blue x leghorn roo, but I'm stubborn I guess.
 
At my house, we call the human-aggressive or extra cockerels "dinner chickens". As in "watch out for the white dinner chicken, it will get you if you aren't careful". And they only stick around until they are processing age. Especially for the egg layer cockerels, whatever weight they get by processing age is the weight they have. Waiting doesn't help them get larger. I barely get 1-2 lbs of meat off of some of them with white leghorn ancestry. I process them because it's the principle of the thing not to let meat go to waste, and to make space in the coup. It's really not worth the time I spend on it - a CX or even an RIR or NH is more worthy of my processing time than a little 2-3 lb carcass Whiting true blue x leghorn roo, but I'm stubborn I guess.
As a kid, many a meal of fried chicken was created from leghorn cockerels from a neighbor's egg production flock.
 

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