Raising different chicks together?

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I did the same. Also I wanted different breeds for different reasons: good layers, good layers in winter, hardy, docile temperament, etc. And the added plus is the variety of colors in my egg basket.
 
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Where are you located that this is illegal? I started with a straight run and did end up with four roosters. We processed them in our backyard which is privacy fenced, so who would know?

The mystery boxes the others mentioned are available from online hatcheries, but they usually are a minimum of 25 chicks. Since you only want 5 that might not be an option for you, but you could see if you could find others in your area who also wanted chicks and split the order once it arrives.....just a thought....
 
I currently live in the Quad Cities of IA/IL, and that's what I read, but other things I read ban backyard chickens entirely. I need to visit a couple city councils before I start building the coop to make sure on everything.
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But with the private slaughter, wouldn't the bird be making some noise? I currently have a very nosy neighbor. And splitting the chicks, it could be a good idea! My dad very much wants to have chickens as well.
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Nope, its a pretty quiet operation. Prior to processing mine, I spent quite a few weeks reading up on the meatie forum and also looking at videos of various methods on YouTube. I decided that the method that would work best for us involved a "killing cone" which is a cone you install somewhere (we screwed ours to a fence post), put the bird in so the head is coming out the bottom and the body is contained in the cone. This eliminates his ability to flap around and there is no "running around like a chook with its head cut off". I tried to keep them very calm beforehand, covering their heads with a dark pillow case while carrying them to the cone. Once in the cone, we moved quick and with a sharp knife cut into the neck, cutting across both the carotid and the jugular. This means they bleed out twice as fast as if you only do one, so they lose consciousness before they even have time to register the pain of the cut (if you think about cutting your finger with a knife while cutting vegies, you see the cut and see the blood before you actually feel it). There is really no sound.

As for nosy neighbors.....the recommendation is to do this after they have fasted, so they don't have a crop full of food and a gut full of food in various stages of digestion. For us what worked best was to do them first thing in the morning. Our birds don't have food in the coop at night so we nabbed them first thing as we were letting them out of the coop and did it then - probably well before the neighbors were up. As soon as they had finished bleeding out (only takes minutes), we lifted them out of the cone and carried them inside and did the rest in the kitchen, so no one was any the wiser.
 
O its soo much more fun to mix because then you can tell them apart when their younger and your also more likely to get different personialties. Plus when you gather the eggs you'll get some cool, different colors.
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I have a mixture of breeds. Not only does this give you a colorful flock but it also allows you to experience various breeds at the same time. Some of my additions this year will include breeds I already have. I will be getting a mixture of breeds again this year. I raise them all for egg laying. All of them are in one coop. This years additions will be raised in a second coop. I will merge them together when they are about 18 weeks old.
 

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