Your DW is right, you can't process them without killing them. I usually say butcher, because it indicates killing for meat, rather than killing for, oh, pest control, sport, or some other reason.
Many say cull, even though they usually aren't really culling at all, which is the removal of unwanted, unfit, or excess animals or plants. If you raised them for meat, and are butchering when the time is right, they aren't excess, unfit, or unwanted. They are fulfilling the purpose you raised them for, that of being killed for food, as intended all along.
There is a desire to try to make it less harsh or disagreeable. Calling it culling, processing, or harvesting is part of that. I can't help but feel that this is a way of trying to avoid the realities involved in eating meat. It's similar to the idea that meat in the supermarket is somehow separated from the act of killing an animal to get it.
No matter what you call it, you are killing a live creature in order to eat it. And that's ok. We're omnivores. If we take responsibility for our own meat, instead of hiring a hit man to do it for us, that's the cleanest, most honest, and most humane way it can be done.
(Note that I acknowledge those who raise birds for sale as meat are forced by law to use an approved processor. That's not what I'm talking about.)
Many say cull, even though they usually aren't really culling at all, which is the removal of unwanted, unfit, or excess animals or plants. If you raised them for meat, and are butchering when the time is right, they aren't excess, unfit, or unwanted. They are fulfilling the purpose you raised them for, that of being killed for food, as intended all along.
There is a desire to try to make it less harsh or disagreeable. Calling it culling, processing, or harvesting is part of that. I can't help but feel that this is a way of trying to avoid the realities involved in eating meat. It's similar to the idea that meat in the supermarket is somehow separated from the act of killing an animal to get it.
No matter what you call it, you are killing a live creature in order to eat it. And that's ok. We're omnivores. If we take responsibility for our own meat, instead of hiring a hit man to do it for us, that's the cleanest, most honest, and most humane way it can be done.
(Note that I acknowledge those who raise birds for sale as meat are forced by law to use an approved processor. That's not what I'm talking about.)