eggbert420
Songster
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How do you wind up with a small fortune breeding chickens?
start with a large fortune![]()
"Value" isn't set. It's fluid. Depends on what a particular person is willing to pay at that moment in time. Trendy breeds start strong, but as you've pointed out, they populate quickly. Then, the market gets flooded, often with inferior quality birds, and folks can hardly give them away. The Cream Crested Legbar comes to mind. I loved the idea of this breed...pretty, productive, autosexing, colored egg layer. But now, with all the random breeding and lack of culling, you've got birds that are all over the place as to color and shape, half the chicks aren't clearly auto sexing, egg color isn't the greatest.....they're a mess, here in the US. Yes, you can still find good breeders who know what they're doing, but you see far more sketchy birds than quality.
If you're looking at chickens from a purely business model, you've also got to look at infrastructure. Breeding pens, incubators, hatchers, brooders, grow out pens, etc. Feed, waterers that don't freeze in the winter. Predator proof pens, cause one momma raccoon will wipe our your entire flock, she doesn't care if they're thousand dollar birds from Greenfire or hatchery chicks from TSC, to her they all taste like chicken.
I guess what I'm trying to say is, there's a reason you don't see Chicken Tycoons. The money just isn't there. You're not going to get rich on raising birds.
there are a few ways to make it a profitable hobby, or even a bit of a business....
selling eggs. Use sex links or Leghorns, and rotate flock out every year or so.
selling chicks. Yep, some rare breeds do fine, but the classics are classics for a reason.
selling hatching eggs. Rare breeds do a bit better here, but you're still not going to be able to retire.
selling point of lay pullets. this is a decent money maker for me, but it's seasonal and takes enough space to grow the birds out to laying age.
selling meat birds. A whole nother story, and tricky depending on your local market.
You get into chickens because you love chickens, not because you're looking to make money. Most of us are thrilled when we can break even or make enough to cover our next hatchery order![]()
