Goal: A large, delicious Thanksgiving bird that can be hatched out in late spring, raised ranging on pasture, and be suitable for a large family meal by November. Must be vigorous, healthy, and can be hatched and raised in a non-industrial homestead type environment.
Problem 1:
Broad-breasted breeds -- short lifespan, growth-related problems, sexually incompetent males, suicidal stupidity, genetic bottlenecks
Problem 2:
Standard breeds -- slow growth, smaller size, poorer feed-conversion ratios
Speculation: Separating the raising of "production" birds from that of purebred parent strains should enable the farmer to take advantage of hybrid vigor in the production birds while maintaining easy-care breeder flocks.
So I'm considering two experiments.
Option A:
Cross my standard breeds next spring (Bourbon reds and Narragansetts). See if the crossbred offspring grow more quickly and make a good table bird by Thanksgiving.
Option B:
Acquire some broad-breasted hens and breed them to my standard toms next year. See if the crossbred offspring grow faster than the standard parent and are also competent living out on range.
Has anyone tried the above (or had the birds try it for them)?
Problem 1:
Broad-breasted breeds -- short lifespan, growth-related problems, sexually incompetent males, suicidal stupidity, genetic bottlenecks
Problem 2:
Standard breeds -- slow growth, smaller size, poorer feed-conversion ratios
Speculation: Separating the raising of "production" birds from that of purebred parent strains should enable the farmer to take advantage of hybrid vigor in the production birds while maintaining easy-care breeder flocks.
So I'm considering two experiments.
Option A:
Cross my standard breeds next spring (Bourbon reds and Narragansetts). See if the crossbred offspring grow more quickly and make a good table bird by Thanksgiving.
Option B:
Acquire some broad-breasted hens and breed them to my standard toms next year. See if the crossbred offspring grow faster than the standard parent and are also competent living out on range.
Has anyone tried the above (or had the birds try it for them)?