I'm a first time chicken owner. We have 15 chickens, mostly brown egg laying hens. They are 4 weeks old. We have 1 Buff Brahma, 2 Black Australorp, 2 Jersey Giants, 2 Barred Rock, 2 Silver Laced Wyandotte, 2 Rhode Island Red, 2 Golden Laced Wyandotte 1 Amberlink and 1 Americauna. There is a 10% failure rate in sexing, so it is possible that we might have a roo in the batch. I am wondering a few things.
1. Will these birds be good egg layers and good meat birds? Can you really have the best of both worlds? We have 7 children, so for a family on 9, we use plenty of eggs and chicken.
2. When do we butcher these hens? We want to get some eggs first. How old do they need to be? If there is a roo, what is the youngest that we can butcher and still get good meat?
3. We'd like to get some meat birds eventually also. How should we handle this? Should we wait a couple of years until we have to butcher some of our hens and then replace them? Or can we overlap?
4. How do we go about planning, so that we can replace egg layers with more egg layers and not have a gap? Timing is the issue.
5. Would it be best for our first year or two, to just buy chicks or should we try our hand at breeding and incubating/hatching?
6. How does one go about butchering a chicken if we don't wish to do it ourselves? We do have a Meat Packing Facility nearby that butchers. But I don't know how it works. Do you bring the chicken in live or dead? If a chicken dies from natural causes (like pecked by other chickens or I don't know...trips and hits its head...) can you still eat it? What about making sure that I actually get my own chickens. If I bring a chicken in to be butchered will they just give me another chicken or will it for sure be mine? What about number of chickens. Do butchers offer a discount, typically, for certain numbers of birds....and if so how does one go about bringing in 15-20 live chickens (assuming they take them live)? This sounds a little like a potential episode of America's funniest home videos!
Thanks everyone, there is so much that I don't know. I appreciate the advice.
1. Will these birds be good egg layers and good meat birds? Can you really have the best of both worlds? We have 7 children, so for a family on 9, we use plenty of eggs and chicken.
2. When do we butcher these hens? We want to get some eggs first. How old do they need to be? If there is a roo, what is the youngest that we can butcher and still get good meat?
3. We'd like to get some meat birds eventually also. How should we handle this? Should we wait a couple of years until we have to butcher some of our hens and then replace them? Or can we overlap?
4. How do we go about planning, so that we can replace egg layers with more egg layers and not have a gap? Timing is the issue.
5. Would it be best for our first year or two, to just buy chicks or should we try our hand at breeding and incubating/hatching?
6. How does one go about butchering a chicken if we don't wish to do it ourselves? We do have a Meat Packing Facility nearby that butchers. But I don't know how it works. Do you bring the chicken in live or dead? If a chicken dies from natural causes (like pecked by other chickens or I don't know...trips and hits its head...) can you still eat it? What about making sure that I actually get my own chickens. If I bring a chicken in to be butchered will they just give me another chicken or will it for sure be mine? What about number of chickens. Do butchers offer a discount, typically, for certain numbers of birds....and if so how does one go about bringing in 15-20 live chickens (assuming they take them live)? This sounds a little like a potential episode of America's funniest home videos!
Thanks everyone, there is so much that I don't know. I appreciate the advice.