Why do chickens flap around after they die?

ninny

Songster
12 Years
Jul 1, 2007
1,155
1
181
IL side of the QCA
This kinda freaks me out. I'd like to raise meat animals but i hate the fact they move still. Can you stop that from happing? And why do they do that?
 
I believe it's because they have a secondary nervous system. You can minimize it by cutting the throat and letting them bleed out as opposed to doing the chop and drop.
 
True- haha, even if you don't buy mine necessarily, I find that using a cone definitely keeps them a lot more still, and prevents EVERYTHING in a six foot circle getting covered with blood!
 
What's really freaky is when they "pulsate" after bleeding out and plucking. The wife HATES that
sickbyc.gif


I think old roos and hens flop alot more than cornish x's though. An old roo will flop for quite a while.
 
Last edited:
Quote:
Some of the Muscovys I butchered last week did that. Almost thought it was still alive until I remembered his head was laying on the ground getting picked at by the yard sharks.
 
Its just the central nervous system shutting down. The heart actually runs on its own set of nerves and blood supply from the brain too. I went to college for large animal vet medicine quite a few years ago. This was back before the animal rights people stepped in and won't let the students do alot of things anymore.

I remember when the head of the vet science department took us through a necropsy of a horse. They walked it in, gave it a bolt to the head, and split it in half right before us. The blood was flowing everywhere! A girl fainted behind me. I specifically remember the instructor saying that the heart will keep on beating for up to an hour after the animal is 'dead'.

We also did experiments with alot of live frogs back then too. We would pin them down and stick another pin in their brain and wiggle it around to technically have them brain dead. When we cut them upen, the hearts were still going. There were chemicals we would inject to their hearts to speed up or slow down the beating. There was also a chemical (I think its used in putting animals to sleep)...some sort of potassium solution... that would stop the heart immediately if even one drop came in contact with it.

My friends call all that moving around the "Crappie Flop"...kind of like the fish out of water. I guess this really doesn't bother me anymore. If I do have to put something out of its misery now, at least I know the job is done then if I see that.

Btw.... This was about 10-15 years ago when I went out to SDSU. I'm sure alot of policies on animal rights have changed since then.
Amy
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom