I would like to breed but don’t know what I would do with unwanted male chicks as I only want to keep one cockerel. i understand it will be difficult to sex them until they are a few weeks old and once this is done what should I do with the unwanted males?
Hi there, welcome to BYC!
Grow them out and eat them is the most logical. Either plan to process yourself or find someone ahead of time that will do it for you. You need to grow them out anyways in order to select one with good enough qualities for breeding as so many things can change when hormones hit and molts happen. Comb sprigs and other things might not show up as early as gender. With predator losses and possible illness, never good to cut yourself too short. What are you wanting to breed and why? That can have a big impact on your options.
When breeding... selling straight run chicks means others deal with the cockerels instead of you, if you aren't trying to increase YOUR flock size.
Give them away as soon as ID'd. Or sell if you are able. There are tons of free roosters all day long here... so selling is not really gonna happen most the time. Do NOT expect them all to find non food homes.
Dispatch and leave somewhere acceptable for wild animals or carrion eaters, maybe even donating to a zoo or wildlife rehab for their use. By the time they are sexable, likely too large to sell as snake food. I have a feral barn cat that cleans up any carcasses left out. Or add to the compost pile for fertilizer. Make a maggot bucket. Or find a way to feed back to your animals. When my dogs catch something like a gopher, there is nothing left. Whatever the dog drops, the chickens clean up.
Good for you for thinking ahead! I too had to decide what to do as a responsible hatcher. Get a plan in place and think about plan B, as life changes and things do fall through sometimes.
It's also possible to keep a rooster and not hatch anything. To me, breeding should be done with a purpose... either to improve the breed, feed my family, etc. But if one is not able to select for good qualities... then that's not really breeding to me.
Happy adventures!
