I dunno... at $7/lb, I'd sell em for market!
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Do you all use a live stock scale to weigh your larger animals? I have a great scale but I need a large scale to weigh turkeys, sheep, peas, etc. Any suggestions?
Since the silkies have black skin, I can't get past that point! LOLI have cornish cross hens under leghorns and EE's. The fertility isn't as high on them, but it could've been due to too many roos? I just sold two roos, so we'll see if fertility increases. I'd LIKE to mix them with silkies to see if I could get that black meat in a bird that's worthwhile to actually butcher, lol.
So, the BBB had to be created forst, which brings in even more genetic crosses into play !From what I have been able to find, this was the initial "mix" used to create the Beltsville's:
Standard Bronze (2 strains); Broad Breasted Bronze (1 strain); Charlevoix Bronze, a Canadian small-type Bronze, (1 strain); White Holland (4 strains); Black (1 strain); Narragansett (1 strain); wild (4 strains); and White Austrian (1 strain) a small-type turkey imported from Scotland specifically for this project.
So, their is plenty of bronze and some black creeping around in their gene pool!
We had a small mallard drake fly into the yard last spring, and flocked with Rouens, I guess he thinks they are all the same breed, IDK, but he has stayed and it is really funny when he tries to mate with one of the rouen ducks, because he is so much smaller. It is mission impossible!!!LOLEither too many roos and the hens are hiding, or if the hens body shape and the rooster's don't mesh...they have a hard time successfully mating. I know in my ducks when one of my Mallard drakes tries to breed one of the much larger Pekin or Appleyards, they often fall or are thrown off before "doing the deed". I've seen the same thing when one of the Cornish roosters tries to get on one of my poor little Ameraucanas: Those hens wiggle out from under those heavy brutes in a big hurry.
If you have an area to pen the hens up with 1 rooster for each 4 to 5 I would do that. Pick the rooster with the same size and body type as the hens and see if that doesn't help.
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All for it!!!I dunno... at $7/lb, I'd sell em for market!
I have cornish cross hens under leghorns and EE's. The fertility isn't as high on them, but it could've been due to too many roos? I just sold two roos, so we'll see if fertility increases. I'd LIKE to mix them with silkies to see if I could get that black meat in a bird that's worthwhile to actually butcher, lol.
That is great to have a commercial outlet for the silkies!!I dunno, I saw that on the one thing online. George's buddy's family owns two Chinese restaurants here though. He's been after my regular chickens, so I'm going to ask him about the black meat and quail eggs once they get started.