I use PVC pipe cutter.... I still use loppers on turkeysthought about using loppers
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I use PVC pipe cutter.... I still use loppers on turkeysthought about using loppers
Yes 5 gallon buckets@RoosterML Are those 5-gallon buckets?
I had thought about using loppers but unfortunately I have nerve issues in my neck that the motion needed to use loppers aggravate terribly. Can't argue with how quick it must be for the chickens, though!
Put some dishwashing soap in the cone. Let it coat the inside. Slippery so they can’t maneuver around well. I also use packing tape and/or a towel in the top of the cone to keep them in place. Once they arteries/veins are cut they should just kind of hang there, not jump out and run around. The soap also helps when you scald them in removing the feathers. This is a total non machine method.I just wrapped up my first attempt at raising and processing meat chickens. 9 total (the 10th is a rooster I did exactly what I said I wouldn't do with and became very fond of, so at least for now he's still around), various breeds. I personally think the meat looks pretty good for a first attempt with non-Cornish breeds. I used a kill cone for the deed and then butchered them on my kitchen table and I think overall that method worked well.
My question is with the kill cone. I have a cone that is supposed to be chicken-sized. Perhaps for large chickens it would be. However, I did have to process 6 of the chickens 3 weeks ago, earlier than I had wanted, as they turned out to be roosters and they were crowing their little hearts out, and when you live in the suburbs like I do your neighbors really don't appreciate that. I put them in the cone with the feet towards me so that I could get to their throats, but even the largest hen that I did today had absolutely no problem getting their feet into the cone and flipping themselves back upright. I was not prepared for this with the first chicken and he ended up flipping himself out of the cone and around the garage as he bled everywhere.
I thought about tying their feet up, but I didn't have a convenient place to do that where I currently have the kill cone set up in my garage, so instead I had to just quickly slit their throats, grab their legs before they could get them down into the cone, and then hold them until they were gone. Thankfully, 80% of the time I hit the vein perfectly and the chickens passed on very quickly so I didn't have to stand there for long. The other 20% though...did not go quickly, and standing there holding them the whole time was not an ideal thing at all.
Any suggestions? Do I just need a smaller cone, or should I try tying their feet next time, or...?