Quote: I will be posting when I buy my Meat birds, and then the classes for Freezer Camp 101, will be held roughly 8 to 10 weeks later. We will hold one on a Saturday and the other on Sunday. This past year I found that it was easier for some to have different weekend days to come to the class. I have found that a number of children seem to be very interested in the process, and are willing to watch.
I'm very interested in this next year! And I can help out with the slaughter. I've never done a bird, but I've watched videos on chickens and I've euthanized some reptiles and rodents as part of my job and rescue work. Usually it's not bloody, but I've processed my own deer kill and an emu that I bought for food, and that certainly was. If someone can show me how to do it humanely I am fine helping out.
Jennifer
Even humanely killing chickens is quite a shock the first time; it's very bloody and the chicken, no matter what way they're slaughtered, still shakes and bok boks (if the cut wasn't in the perfect place) while bleeding out. All I'm saying is it's a shock, so prepare yourself; I'm still a 100% proponent of it, but eesh. All the boys I brought still think it was awesome, but I was a bit shocked.
Yeah, I watched an interesting set of videos that were made by a local homesteading group on how to slaughter and process a chicken. The woman sat with the hen on her lap, neck stretched down and held firmly, and cut the jugular with a sharp knife. She then had to hold the bird while it bled out, and there still was some splattering. Do you use cones?
I still remember my uncle using a hatchet and tree stump to slaughter roosters when I was a kid. That was messy. I'm not afraid of getting bloody, although it's been a while.
Jennifer
We use cones here. My DS knows where they keep the dead traffic cones, and picked us up a couple. The cones work very well to keep things fairly well contained. We try to keep things to a low roar, so that we don't have the dogs messing around in the nasty stuff. We are also located in a small sub-division so we try to not alert the neighbors, as to what is going on over this side of the fence.