Out of ten chicks that hatched from my bator....nine are cockerels. Bummer!! So I have black copper and cuckoo marans. Beautiful birds....but can't keep them all. This feed helped me decide when to butcher. Thx!!!
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Out of ten chicks that hatched from my bator....nine are cockerels. Bummer!! So I have black copper and cuckoo marans. Beautiful birds....but can't keep them all. This feed helped me decide when to butcher. Thx!!!
Cockrel no 2 was processed today at 3 lb finished. My husband hunted birds in his youth and can dispatch and once done I do the rest of the process. Have to say though that meat isn't my goal for having chickens and although I like having birds or eggs from breeders I wish that there was a way that sexing day old chicks could be available from more than just the hatcheries. As someone interested in eggs I have brought the birds along for several months and now have fewer for eggs than I would have liked. Yes some satisfaction in the freezer but it is still time I have spent.Out of 6 Wyandottes hatched on March 24th I have two roosters and one had started crowing and so I processed him today. It was my first time to do this and it took around an hour and I ended up with 3.9 lb finished. I had been feeding fermented crumble, with dry always available and they had some free range time too and treats and kitchen scraps. When I picked him up I thought he was going to be a big bunch of feathers and not much thereafter as he was a tall rangy thing but he did have a little fat on him after all. Really opened my eyes to how the CX pack on weight.
This is super helpful! Im going to write this one downI can't give you a time frame,but if you grab the roo and feel the drumstick is it meaty, then spread the feathers on the breast, if the skin is a rose pink or yellow there ready, if the skin is red or purplish the means there's no fat yet and there not ready. time frame really depends on how there fed and what breed. this is how I tell
also pinch the shin on the breast if its thin not ready, thicker ready what your looking for is a thin layer of fat.
I feed grower and free range, I separate the butcher birds from the keepers
It was helpful to me even all these years laterI butcher my cockerels/roos they are a mix of Orpington over Orpington, Delaware, EE, BR and Cochin; I even process my bantam cockerels/roos. I let them stay with the main flock until they start showing interest in the hens, then move them to a run/pen by themselves. I feed all my flock Flock Raiser and that is what the guys get. I usually process when they are 5 to 6 months (20 to 24 weeks) or when they become a pain in my backside for whatever reason. The last two processed, after cleaning their weight was 3 pounds 15.8 ounces for one and 4 pounds 10.8 ounces on the second.
This is a fantastic article for the homegrown bird age for processing and cooking: www.albc-usa.org/documents/cookingwheritagechicken.pdf
Ooops just saw the age of this thread![]()