- Thread starter
- #51
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Ok, so just one more question, I have 5 breeds
- Golden lace wyandottes
- Silver laces wyandottes
- Plymouth barred rock
- Whit rock
- Dominipue
Are any of these going to leave marks on the skin when I butcher!!!
I'Ve not slaughtered any of mine yet, sorryOk, does anybody know about the wyandottes??
It looks like I've been giving partly-wrong advice, thinking that feather color always caused colored bits in the skin, because clearly someone was able to pluck a Barred Rock and have it look nice and clean. Now I don't know what to think.![]()
Also note that it happens with commercially prepared chicken also. I've gotten feathers attached to wings that were battered and fried. Not pin feathers. Just plain old missed feathers. I know some people who would be bothered by that. Best not to look too close. That's why all the fancy restaurants are dimly lit. Things look better in the dark.I think this is a common problem on this forum. Somebody says this can, might, often, occasionally, could possibly happen and people automatically think it absolutely has to happen each and every time. "If" is another word that is often ignored.
If you pluck a chicken the pin feathers can be left, some often are. If they are white or buff they aren't that noticeable. If they are dark red or black they are very noticeable. That's why Cornish X are white, so the pin feathers don't show up as much.
When a new feather is starting to grow in, like when the chickens are molting (either adult molt or juvenile molt) you can get a bunch of spots where there is a liquid that looks like ink where the new feather is growing. Or small feathers themselves. Really ugly. Often we butcher dual purpose cockerels when they are going through a juvenile molt. Same thing with ducks. If the feathers are light this is not as noticeable as when they are dark. They are still there, just not as noticeable.
None of this hurts the taste of the meat, but it can make a big difference in a pretty carcass or an ugly one.
Just like any other breed characteristic, it is an individual bird thing.Ok, does anybody know what the temperament of the roosters of those 5 breeds I put in the post above post is?