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Showing posts with label book share. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book share. Show all posts

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Raising Poultry Successfully - Chapter 3

Chapter 3
RAISING BROILER-FRYERS FOR MEAT

Raising broiler-fryers for meat provides a quick return on your money, time, and effort.  With the right variety of chickens, the right feed, and correct care, you can aim for a 4-pound bird on 8 pounds of feed in 8 weeks.  You can figure that a 4-pound bird dressed will yield about 3 pounds of delicious meat (this includes bone).

WHAT IS INVOLVED?
First, you are going to have to decide whether you want to start with eggs that you incubate yourself, or whether you want to start with day-old chicks.  If you are going to incubate the eggs, you will have to purchase an incubator and a candling device, or locate some broody hens and make a candling device yourself.

Then you will have to decide which breed to raise, and order either eggs or the chicks.

Before those eggs or chicks arrive, you need to build a chicken house, either from scratch or by renovating an existing building.  You will have to equip it with feeders, waters, and a heat source.  Next, you need to lay in a source of feed.  Then, you will finally be ready for those chicks or eggs to arrive.  But, it really isn't as much work as it sounds.

STARTING YOUR BROILER-FRYER FLOCK
The best time to start your flock is from March until June.  Then the weather is on your side.  Day-old chicks, whether you buy them live or incubate them yourself, will need a source of heat for the first 6 to 8 weeks of their lives.  Your costs will be lower if you wait for the warm weather.  Although in this day and age, raising broilers commercially is a year-round business, you will need all the help you can get from Mother Nature.  If you live in the Sunbelt, buy your eggs or chicks in March or April.  If you are located in the North, wait until May or June to begin your flock.

INCUBATING EGGS VERSUS BUYING DAY-OLD CHICKS
How do you want to start the flock?  Do you want to incubate the eggs yourself, or do you want to start with day-old chicks?

The incubation process takes 21 days and is full of perils, whether you use natural incubation methods (setting the eggs under a broody hen) or artificial incubation (in a relatively low-cost incubator).

First, there is the problem of obtaining hatching eggs of the breed of chicken that you want.  Unless you live within a reasonable driving distance of a hatchery that will sell fertile eggs of the variety you desire, the eggs will be shipped to you via Air Parcel Post.  The shipping costs will be more expensive than for live chicks as 1 egg weighs more than 1 day-old chick.

Only a small number of hatcheries that do sell eggs for incubating only will sell them in minimum lots of 50 or 100.  All of the hatcheries that sell hatching eggs issue a disclaimer that they will not guarantee either the fertility or hatchability of the eggs.  In contrast, any reputable hatcher will guarantee 100 percent live arrival of baby chicks, or refund your money.

Hatcheries that do sell fertile eggs and will ship them, charge from $.50 to $1.00 per egg, with no guarantee of results.  I have had the personal experience of having only 50 percent of the eggs I incubated hatch out.  The national average for successful hatching is about 60 percent, although the makers of artificial incubators claim an average of up to 70 percent hatching success with their machines.  I know of some small-flock poultry farmers who have experienced total failure in incubating eggs.  Twenty-one days of anxious care and then, zilch!

If you want to put meat on your table in as short a time as possible, you will want to start with day-old chicks.  If you order from a reputable source, your chicks are guaranteed to arrive alive.  And you will avoid the expense of incubating machines and the fuss of watching over the incubation process.

There is, however, 1 strong reason to consider incubating eggs.  Although the incubation process, whether by natural or artificial means, seems like a big hassle, I would like to say that it is not my intention to discourage anyone from incubating eggs.  Although it is usually touted as a good project for rural children, 4H club members, Future Farmers of America, and science classes, there is no reason an adult cannot enjoy the experience of incubating eggs.  The miracle of birth never ceases to amaze and delight me, whether it's the birth of a chick, duckling, gosling, turkey poult, piglet, lamb, calf, or colt.

Whether you are incubating or starting with chicks, if you are a beginner, I suggest you start with 25 broiler-type chicks.  This means that to be on the safe side, you will need 4 dozen fertile eggs, assuming that about 60 percent of them will hatch out live.  Four dozen fertile eggs, at the minimum price, will cost about $12.00 with no guarantees.  You can buy 25 day-old broiler chicks for about $14.25, guaranteed live arrival at your local post office.  Be sure the fertile eggs you buy are for meat birds.  A Cornish-Rock cross is recommended.

It is my intention to provide alternatives.  If you are on of those people who are in a hurry to put meat on the table, stay tuned for buying broiler-fryer chicks.  Otherwise, tune in next week to read about incubating eggs.


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Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Raising Poultry Successfully - Chapter 2 continued


Chapter 2
WHAT KIND OF CHICKENS SHOULD YOU RAISE?
(CONTINUED)

BREED OF CHICKENS
There are about 200 varieties of chickens, and they come in all kinds of sizes, colors, and shapes. They vary in size from a fancy, multicolored, 1 pound bantam to a Giant Brahma which can weigh 12 pounds. Besides white chickens, there are all black, greenish black, black barred, red, brown, buff, golden, silver laced, silver penciled, and blue chickens.

Some breeds of chickens have fascinating feather patterns. The Cochins have fluffy feathers running all the way down their legs to their toes. Others, like the Turken, have naked necks. And some, like the Golden Polish, have hoods on their heads, like little top hats.

Barred Rock and Wyandotte roosters produce hackle feathers that bass fisherman use for tying fishing lures. Both of these varieties are dual-purpose chickens, good for producing both eggs and meat. The hens lay large brown eggs.

The White Leghorn is the workhorse of the egg-laying breeds of chickens, capable of laying more than 20 dozen large white eggs per year.

The Rock-Cornish, or Cornish-Rock, is favored by the large commercial broiler factories because it develops quickly. This broiler chicken has a meaty breast, thick thighs and legs, and can gain 4 pounds in 8 weeks. The mature hens are poor layers of brown eggs.

Of course, the breed of chicken you will raise depends on what you want the chickens for: meat, eggs, or both. Then you should narrow down your choices to pick a breed that appeals to you, as far as color, size, and shape.

LEARNING MORE ABOUT CHICKENS
The problem is, how do you know what you like if your association with chickens is very limited? First, visit chicken farms and hatcheries in your area. You can ask your feed store dealer for names and addresses of local people who have small farm flocks. When you visit these people, ask them why they raise a certain bird, how much it costs, how long it takes for the birds to reach maturity, and the potential production of their flock in the way of eggs or meat. Also ask about any particular problems relative to the breed they raise.

If you can't locate any local small flock growers to visit, write to distant hatcheries and request their color catalogs. You can get the names and addresses of hatcheries from farm magazines, rural newspapers and the county extension service. Your state or county extension poultry specialist is, by the way, one of the best sources of information of all.

After you have visited chicken growers, talked to your poultry specialist, and scanned the gorgeous color catalogs from faraway hatcheries, you'll be more competent in choosing a variety of chickens to raise. Remember, it's not much fun raising white-feathered chickens if you really like red, brown, or black birds. Raising a small flock should be fun.

WHAT ABOUT RAISING DUAL-PURPOSE CHICKENS FOR BROILERS?
Largely ignored in recent years by the big commercial broiler factories and egg producers, medium-size chickens that provided both meat and eggs were the mainstay of the poultry farmer up until the 1930s and 1940s. Examples of this type of chicken are Rhode Island Red, New Hampshire, Buff Oprington, Silver Laced Wyandotte, Barred Plymouth Rock, and Black Australorp.

Certainly one of these breeds could have been chosen to crossbreed with the Cornish Game chicken to produce a fast-growing meaty chick, just as well as the White Plymouth Rock. Except for 1 reason. Dual-purpose chickens are all birds of color with the exception of the White Plymouth Rock. At 8 weeks of age, when dressed out as a broiler-fryer, they can have tiny dark spots in the skin where their pinfeathers were removed. There is no such problem with the white-feathered White Plymouth Rock.

By the way, birds of color, once they have reached maturity and have their final plumage, will dress out very nicely, with no troublesome pinfeathers. Thus, they make excellent roasters weighing 6 to 8 pounds.

It is to the credit of our independent hatcheries that they are perpetuating these dual-purpose varieties and still supply the old favorites to the small flock grower.

HOW DO THE MEDIUM-SIZED BIRDS STACK UP AGAINST THE HYBRIDS?
For the most part, the straightbreds will take longer to reach optimum broiler-fryer weight. So it will cost more to feed them. There are exceptions, however. Some New Hampshire strains can match the Cornish-Rock hybrids, inch for inch and pound for pound. The big broiler factories don't push standardbred chickens because hybrids tend to be more uniform with regard to growth rate and livability, and there is less chance of undesirable recessive characteristics.

HOW ABOUT THE VERY HEAVY BREEDS?
Jersey Black Giants, Jersey White Giants, Light Brahmas, Dark Brahmas, Buff Brahmas, White Cochins, Black Cochins, and Buff Cochins all fall into the category of heavy breed. These breeds and varieties are slower-growing than either they hybrids or dual-purpose types; but when fully developed, they have massive frames and make wonderful roasting chickens. They reach mature weights of 10, 12, or more pounds.

Why choose a slower-growing breed of chicken? They have quiet dispositions and are easy to manage. Due to their small comb, giant size, and heavy plumage, they can survive severe winter weather conditions. It would be unrealistic to raise these varieties in the hope of producing a 4-pound broiler in 8 weeks. And you wouldn't keep them for egg production as the hens are poor layers of brown eggs. They are a good choice for hobbyists, poultry fanciers, and those people who just like the way they look and act.

START OUT SMALL
As a beginner, you should plan to start out small. Keep you venture into chickens within manageable bounds.

For those of you who are in a hurry to put meat on the table, chapter 3 offers a plan to raise 4-pound broilers in 8 weeks on 8 pounds of feed.

But those of you who are not in such a hurry can take things a little easier. I suggest buying about 25 day-old chickens. With that small number, it won't cost you an arm and a leg to raise them; the task of butchering them won't be overwhelming (you should do it yourself); and you can realize 75 pounds of meat from the project. It is not a long-range venture. If you don't like growing broilers, they'll be gone in a couple of months.

And I don't recommend that you go out and invest in a lot of cages, either. I can sympathize with commercial poultry producers who deal with thousands of broilers, whose living depends on programmed efficiency, and to whom time is of the essence. But, for small flock owners, not involved in commercial trade, who eat what they raise, cages and total confinement of the chickens is not necessary. I prefer the natural way: a rooster crowing at false dawn, broody hens and chickens running free - well fairly free, at least on fenced range. When you're a kid, bare feet on fresh chicken droppings is ok. When you get older, it leaves something to be desired and you build a fence.

If it is eggs you are primarily interested in, then I suggest that you start with a flock of about a dozen pullets. Keeping any more hens that this will usually result in a surplus of eggs during their peak laying season. Although, you can sell, trade, barter, freeze, or use surplus eggs in baking, it often takes more effort than it is worth to dispose of the surplus.

I recommend to novices that they start with a dual-purpose breed, as they have quieter dispositions than the lightweight breeds, and they give you a roast as a bonus. Even though they eat more feed, start laying eggs later, and may provide fewer eggs, I believe the advantages of raising dual-purpose hens outweigh the disadvantages.

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Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Raising Poultry Successfully - Chapter 2


Chapter 2
WHAT KIND OF CHICKENS SHOULD YOU RAISE?

Once you have decided that you want to raise chickens, and determined that you have the space, a building of some sort, and that the law allows it, the next thing to decide is whether you want eggs, meat or a combination of both. do you want to spend 8 weeks or 17 months on the venture? In the case of eggs, do you want white ones or brown ones?

Decisions, decisions, decisions! But, they are fun decisions. What kind of chickens to raise? How long does it take? How much will it cost? What can you expect in the way of production?

TYPES OF CHICKENS
Up until about 1930, chickens were kept mostly for their eggs. Almost every farm had a small flock of medium-size, dual-purpose chickens. These chickens were fed on dinner table scraps, plus whatever grain the farmer's wife could scrounge from the oat bin or corn crib. Nothing very scientific about that. After a couple of years, when the hens didn't lay enough eggs to pay for their keep, they were thrown into the pot for soup or stew. When the roosters, having been fed on a catch-as-can basis, finally reached a reasonable weight, they provided the customary Sunday dinner.

Early in the 1930s, several major changes took place in the production of chickens for both eggs and meat. The practice of keeping the old-fashioned, medium-weight, dual-purpose chickens began to decrease. Poultry farmers began to specialize in raising birds for either eggs or meat.

If, up until the 1930s, cooking the meat of chickens was usually only an offshoot of keeping a flock for eggs, by the early 1930s, things had changed. Boy, how they changed! The broiler industry was booming. Heavy varieties of chickens were being used, mostly hybrid crosses of the Cornish and White Plymouth Rock breeds, to produce fast-growing birds with broad breasts, big legs and thighs, and rich yellow skin.

In 1934, about 30 million broilers were produced in the United States. In 1983, over 2 billion broilers were raised. In the 1930s, it took about 5 pounds of feed to put 1 pound of gain on a broiler chicken over a period of 4 months. In 1952, the amount of feed required to raise a broiler to about 4 pounds had been reduced to 3 1/2 pounds, over a period of 12 weeks. Now, in the 1980s, it only takes 2 pounds of feed to produce 1 pound of weight gain on a broiler chicken.

Similar specialization has taken place in the production of light-weight egg-producing chickens, with all the brooding and mothering instincts bred out of the hens. As a small flock owner, you too can specialize in meat or eggs. Or you can raise the old-fashioned, dual-purpose chickens from which you can get both eggs and meat. There are differences in terms of time and work involved. Let's take a look at what the differences are.

MEAT CHICKENS
Meat birds come in a few different categories. When ready for eating, a broiler-fryer is a bird less than 3 months old, male or female, with a pliable, smooth-textured skin and tender meat. The breastbone cartilage is quite flexible, in contrast to a 1-year old bird whose breastbone tip is hard and inflexible.

It used to be that broilers and fryers were prepared differently for the retail trade, thus the different terms. Broilers were sold whole or cut in half. Fryers were quartered so that there were 2 pieces combining breast and wing, and 2 pieces combining drumstick and thigh. Today, however, you will find whole birds labeled as fryers at your supermarket. It is a matter of semantics; the words broilers and fryers are used fairly interchangeably.

Although theses meat birds reach good slaughter weights quickly, mature hens lay few eggs, and feeding a heavy hen for her sparse output of eggs can drive you to the poorhouse. A broiler-fryer chick can reach 4 pounds, live weight, in 8 weeks and yield about 3 pounds of edible meat, with some bone included.

A roaster is a larger chicken, of either sex, which is usually slaughtered at 5 months or less, weighing 5 to 8 pounds. They have tender meat and flexible breastbone cartilage. Capons are castrated male chickens, raised to a larger size than broiler-fryers and used for roasting.

I recommend that beginners concentrate on raising broiler-fryers for meat birds.

EGG LAYERS
The strictly egg laying type of chicken starts producing eggs about 5 months from the day she is born. In her first laying cycle, which can last 12 to 14 months, she can produce 20 to 22 dozen eggs. Although she can lay almost 10 times her own weight within a year, this hen is small, skinny, and nervous, and won't provide much meat for a Sunday dinner when she has outlived her productiveness.

DUAL-PURPOSE CHICKENS
Dual purpose chickens, larger than strictly egg-laying types, are good for both eggs and meat, but they take a little longer to mature. The hens start laying at 5 1/2 to 6 months. With some notable exceptions, they generally lay fewer eggs than the strictly egg-laying types - perhaps 18 to 20 dozen during a laying cycle. They also cost more to keep because they eat more feed; but the hens can provide a tasty dinner after their egg-laying cycle is over. With some exceptions, the cockerels (males) take longer to reach good broiler-fryer weight. However, they can be carried on to a good roaster weight of 5 to 8 pounds.

The hens take longer to reach the egg-laying stage than egg-layers, and their egg production is usually less. The cockerels, with the exception of certain strains, take longer to reach optimum broiler weight then most meat breeds, although they can be carried on to reach good roaster weight of 5 pounds or more. Both the hens and cockerels provide tenderer meat than the lightweight, strictly egg-laying types of chickens.

FURTHER COMPARISON OF CHICKENS
It doesn't take long to raise broilers and fryers. Raising chickens for egg production takes a lto longer and is more involved.

Although the care and feeding of any baby chick is about the same for the first 6 weeks, after that point, meat birds and potential egg layers go separate ways. The meat chick is kept on a high-protein feed ration. The egg chick is fed a ration lower in protein because too much protein at that stage of her life can cause a female to come into egg production too soon, resulting in fewer and smaller eggs and possible damage to her internal organs.

Thus, it is not advisable to keep broiler-fryers and egg layers in the same pen, certainly not past 6 weeks. Also, egg layers enjoy roosts and must have nests to lay their eggs in, pieces of furniture totally unnecessary for the meat birds.

With regard to time involved, most people spend more time attending to household (nonproducing) pets, such as cats and dogs, than is required in caring for a little flock of chickens.
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Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Raising Poultry Successfully

Photo from Doolittle Farm Yarn.

Lately I have chickens on the brain. I think they are funny to watch, provide good bug control in the summer, and nothing compares to farm fresh eggs. I had a small flock six or so years ago, but it was the wrong time in my life to do so. I am no longer working three jobs, live just outside of town on half an acre, and am very committed to living a more eco-friendly, simple, sustainable life. Chickens come to mind. Well, chickens and a goat, but I am having a hard time convincing Hubby on that one. Just think of all the gas and time we would save by not having to mow the lawn. Pleeeeaaaase???

Pretty please?

Anyway, I am giving serious thought to having backyard chickens again and am reading the book Raising Poultry Successfully. Since this seems to be an area of considerable interest in the green blogosphere I thought I would share my book with all of you. The book covers chickens, ducks, and geese, but for now I am going to focus on the chicken chapters.


Chapter 1
WHY RAISE CHICKENS?

Some people raise rare and fancy chickens as a hobby, sometimes for shows. Others raise certain breeds for their hackle feathers (neck feathers), which they use to make fishing lures.


However, the best reason that I can think of for raising chickens are to provide fresh eggs and delicious meat for you and your family.


Have you ever tasted a really fresh egg? Sometimes, when people experience a happy occasion, they exclaim, "My cup runneth over!" But, when you crack an egg into the frying pan, you do not want it to runneth over. That's an unhappy occasion. A fresh egg does not runneth over the pan. The higher the yolk stands and the more compactly the white stays together, the fresher the egg.


If you have never eaten a fresh egg, that is, an egg served on your plate on the same day it was laid, you are in for a special treat. Once you have tasted a really fresh egg, you can never go back to the supermarket variety, which may have been packaged 30 days before you brought it home.


Not only can chicken be prepared in 101 different ways, but health practitioners are recommending that we eat more chicken and less red meat. The meat from chickens has less fat and fewer calories, and contains more protein of higher quality, than comparable amounts of beef or other red meats.


You don't need a lot of land or space in order to raise chickens. Whether you have several acres or just a big backyard, if you have some kind of outbuilding - a shed, garage, or small barn - and if your local zoning laws don't prohibit it, and if the neighbors don't protest, you can raise chickens to have fresh eggs and tasty meat for your table for a small outlay of cash and a little effort and time.


The care and feeding of chickens is a responsibility. Before deciding to raise chickens, consider the fact that it is a 7 day a week job. As a beginner, you will probably start out with a small flock of chickens, and their care and feeding will take only about 15 minutes of your time, twice a day, every day. This means you can't go away for the weekend and leave them to fend for themselves. Also, in the interest of economy, the killing and dressing-out of meat birds should be done by you or members of your family. If you doubt that you are capable of killing and cleaning the birds, then the raising of meat birds (broiler-fryers) is probably not for you. You could still raise laying chickens for their eggs alone.


Chickens are colorful; their behavior is interesting and amusing. Give your children a chance to help with the daily chores. It will help them develop a sense of responsibility and will give them a hand in useful, productive work. Chickens can make reasonably good pets, although they cannot be housebroken. They will come when called, fly up onto your shoulder, and eat out of your hand. But, and this is very important, do not make a pet of any bird or animal you will ultimately slaughter and eat. Just the thought of eating a pet is repugnant to most people. Treat the birds with kindness and consideration, but don't make pets of them if they are destined to wind up in the freezer.


Speaking of freezers, you will need one with the capacity to hold about 75 pounds of meat, if you begin a broiler raising venture with 25 baby chicks, as I suggest in chapter 3.


A very good reason for raising meat birds is that it can be a short-term project. You can fill that aforementioned freezer with broiler-fryers in just 8 weeks, whereas it takes about 5 months to raise a pig or lamb to good slaughter weight, and up to 1 year to raise a beef calf. And, of course, those animals cost more to start with. You aren't liable to lose your shirt with a small flock of chickens.


However, the idea that you can save money by raising chickens in not a good reason to do it. All things considered, including maintenance of the chicken house, cost of the chicks, the feed, necessary equipment, electricity, and your time and labor, you cannot save money by raising your own flock. You probably can buy eggs and packaged broilers at a supermarket (albeit not as fresh and delicious) cheaper than you can raise them. this is especially true for a small flock. Larger flocks may be more economical.


Economics aside, the main reason for raising you own chickens are quality and satisfaction. Your own eggs will be fresher, and the meat will taste better. Due to a lot of static, mostly from small flock owners, there are fewer drugs in commercial chicken feed than in previous years. This means even higher quality fresh meat - even if you don't grow your own feed.


And, there is a certain satisfaction in gathering your own eggs and barbecuing your own fryers that cannot be gained in any other way. You fed, watered, cared for, and raised these birds. Now you can enjoy the fruits of your labor. You can't buy that kind of satisfaction at the market.

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