M
Member 482121
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Many years ago, in Montana, a friend asked me to kill her old laying hens that were not laying any longer. I used the chopping block with two nails to keep the neck stretched out and a sharp ax. I must have killed about thirty birds, and I noticed that it wasn't just the body that convulsed. The head showed signs of suffering: the beak opened and closed and the eyes blinked several times. In the times of the guillotine it was proved that humans could still remain conscious for several seconds before the lack of oxygen to the brain made the brain die. I surmise that to the victim those seconds must have felt like an eternity of hell. Under the assumption that pain is felt in the brain and that decapitation must, therefore, be very painful albeit for a very short time, I prefer to destroy the brain itself by shooting the chicken in the back of the head with a .22 pistol and a hollow-point high-velocity bullet. The bullet itself and the violent exit of combustion gases (I place the muzzle against the head) make the head explode and the brain is immediately and completely destroyed. No brain, no pain. Naturally one must be careful of ricochets and conscious that the bullet will keep on going after exiting the chicken's head. My wife holds the chicken down with a hand on its back in a large plastic tub filled with loose soil. The exiting bullet is safely stopped by the soil after penetrating it. Naturally the body convulses and the heart keeps on beating for some time. Holding the chicken upside down after shooting it will effectively bleed it out, as the disintegration of the head will also open the main blood vessels that oxygenate the brain. Upon butchering chickens killed in this manner I have never found any blood in the body. I know this method sounds gross, violent, and loud. By I could not force myself to kill animals that I have raised, nurtured, and even given names to in a manner that would cause any suffering. These are animals that know and trust you, that eat from your hand and even (some of them) jump in your lap. Making them suffer even for the five or ten seconds (the time it takes for the severed head to stop giving signs of life) is unthinkable. As I wrote in another post, I am a hunter. I always try to kill my prey as humanely as possible. Should I then make my own pets suffer? If it weren't for the fact that I kill chickens to consume their meat I would even consider a lethal injection--but that would render them inedible.