Tips for first time culling?

Jaemomma

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Tomorrow morning will be my first time culling my flock. I have 6 20 week old roosters that I plan to cull.

So, any tips for a first timer? I have watched videos, read step by step directions, but I wanted to know, if you had any advice as well? What is the most important thing to remember?

Thanks.
 
It depends on how you are going to do the deed, if you are just taking a hatchet to the head just make it quick so they don't feel anything. If you are just cutting the artery hang the chicken upside down and use a very sharp knife. Plucking/skinning: I've done both and I think the skinning method works the best and less messy.
 
Agreed - how do you plan on killing them? If it's with a hatchet, I would suggest you have someone there to hold the bird for you. We use 2 nails in a stump in a "v" shape, put the head on one side of the nails, and I hold the chicken, gently pulling the body taut. DH wields the hatchet. If I had to do it alone, I think I'd use a cone and slit the throat. I'd slit it through, though, so it dies more quickly instead of hanging there slowly bleeding to death. If you decapitate with a hatchet, be prepared for flopping and flapping. It can be unnerving if you've never seen it. It's just their nerve endings misfiring. They are dead, really. Once the head is off, it's all over. There can be a smell that accompanies the butchering process. The meat is still fine. Sometimes we skin, sometimes we pluck. Depends on our plans for the birds we're processing. Whatever method you use to kill them, make sure you are steady and don't hesitate partway through. Just do it. You don't want your birds to suffer.
 
Thanks everyone. We used a hatchet, it was very effective. Boy was that a lot of work! I have a feeling it doesn't normally take seasoned pros this long but it took us just under 4 hours from start to finish to process 6 chickens. From coop to freezer. It was definitely a learning experience! I don't think I'd ever want to do more than 1 or two at a time in the future. Hopefully my 7 hens will be happier now that there is only 1 rooster instead of 7!
 
Thanks everyone. We used a hatchet, it was very effective. Boy was that a lot of work! I have a feeling it doesn't normally take seasoned pros this long but it took us just under 4 hours from start to finish to process 6 chickens. From coop to freezer. It was definitely a learning experience! I don't think I'd ever want to do more than 1 or two at a time in the future. Hopefully my 7 hens will be happier now that there is only 1 rooster instead of 7!
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Good job. I'll never do more than 1-2 at a time because it's just me and I'm old.
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