Now...the question is, what to make of it?
- Either I am feeding too many carbs and proteins, which is a possibility because both culls had WAY too much fat around their vents~ OR~
- These two birds were prone to overeat and accumulate fat, which is also a possibility due to their fat stores and the placement of them~ OR~
- It's the time of year when they are supposed to be accumulating fat of this nature and I don't get to see this level of fat because I never cull at this time of the year~ OR~
- A combination of all these factors~which I'm inclined to believe is the logical answer.
Well finally....but I missed it yesterday cuz I left the grocery store.

Anyway, I'm not all the way though to the end so please excuse if someone has already suggested this idea regarding the fat...here's my thought on this.
Think about how our bodies are designed to operate under normal circumstances (read: before there were grocery stores on every corner). In the old days you would eat all summer long, store what you could for the winter, but the winter would be more lean. You'd put on weight in the summer, and live off the fat when things got lean - throughout the winter.
Along those same lines, when a person diets and loses weight then begins to eat normally, it seems that the first weight they put on is fat rather than lean muscle. It is a carry-over from the way our bodies were designed to handle normal, seasonal cycles. (Now we can regulate this if we're careful and keep things in balance as well.)
Now fast-forward to the gnarly bunch. When you found them they were on the "starved" end of things. Their bodies were depleted - much like coming out of lean winter. Then they began to eat... and good picken's too...
I'm thinking that their bodies are on the rebound and they'll balance out given time. I think its likely their bodies attempts to store up for lean times and once they adjust to having year-round, ample food, things will balance out and they'll return to a normal appetite and fat levels.
Whatdaya think?
ETA: This isn't to say that you shouldn't reduce feed a bit for the winter...that would make sense in the "real" cycles of life.
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