When hatching?...what are your plans for them?

I've only hatched once, and so far, I'm keeping all the females. Out of my first hatch I got 3 males, and I'm keeping 2. The third will be invited to dinner in the next couple weeks. I'll be hatching again soon, and again keeping all the females.

And so I don't run out of room, I'm building another coop.
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I'm having to ask myself this same question, as this is my first time hatching...and the eggs were purchased as I don't have my own flock.
Do you keep them and let them grow a bit, and then sell them, or do you sell them young? Is it harder to sell them once the roos can be distinguished? I'm hatching Bantams, mostly Silkies.
 
I hatch for kicks.....sometimes I keep them, sometimes I sell them. Sometimes I hatch them to keep them and then later decide to sell them. Last batch I hatched out was some shipped eggs (only 3 hatched, brahmas) and a bunch of my own eggs. I ended up giving away all the roosters at about 12 weeks (what a waste of feeding for so long!)....and have kept all the pullets. They are just at POL now and I am going to keep them until I decide to sell them. They should be awesome layers, so I don't mind keeping them around....now that they are at laying age, they will pay for their own feed. The brahmas I had hatched to keep, but sold them recently....just decided to go in a different direction. Their sale paid for the shipped eggs....I am out all the food, but I did get to enjoy them while I fed them, so that is fine.


This year I plan to get rid of boys as soon as I can tell they are boys.....even if I just give them away. It is not worth the space or feed to keep them to try to sell them. I have no problem keeping the girls and trying to sell later on. Lots of room around here, once fully feathered they just get tossed out into the big yard to free range with the big flock. My coop is only 8x8, but all they do is sleep there, so I am not neurotic on space. I still have about 6 feet of empty roost space in there....which will fit about a dozen chickens the way they stack up at night, LOL. I have room for another 6 foot roost as well. I expect to sell some started layers once it is closer to spring.

I think it is easier to sell as straight run, day olds.......once you can tell roos, you either have to NOT sell straight run (smart people pick out the girls and you get screwed) or try to sell the roos alone, which doesn't work well...at least for me.

My last group, I ended up with about 10 cockerels....once I kept them to about 12-13 weeks, they were ready to be finished for a couple weeks and processed, so I had no trouble giving the group away. Someone ate really good on my dime
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So straight run means day old chicks, or not visibly sexed? I've always wondered what that means. It would be nice to keep some around as I might keep a few hens, but then I might be stuck with some roos as well...and I cannot have them here.
 
Personlly I have a hard time selling the ones I hatch. LOL

But, I hatch out for me eggs, breeders and fertile eggs. and eating eggs.

Sometimes I sell birds!

Around here no one wants birds still on starter. They want ones right at laying age.
 

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