In loving memory of Kenis D. Keathley 6/4/81 - 3/27/22 Loving father, husband, brother, friend and firewood hoarder Rest in peace, Dexterday

Homesteading Chickens

Discussion in 'Hobbies and Interests' started by KatwillNY, Mar 11, 2015.

  1. The Wood Wolverine

    The Wood Wolverine

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    Currently have 6 chickens. My wife's father had them and she always wanted some too, so I agreed. That's been several years ago.
    DSC00311.JPG DSC00308.JPG DSC00307.JPG DSC00202.JPG
     
  2. jetjr

    jetjr

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    Well down another rooster. My mixed breed one decided to go after my littlest yesterday. Went over like a fart in church of course. Thought he was smart and ran in between 2 stacks of wood. Ole .22 zipped right through.

    Actually should have done it sooner as he was showing signs of being aggressive. Still have a Silkie rooster that seems pretty docile. Maybe it's cause I had 2.
     
  3. papadave

    papadave

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    Right where I want to be.
    Dinner!
     
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  4. jetjr

    jetjr

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    No unfortunately the first shot was center mass and messed up a lot of meat. He jammed his way in there pretty good.
     
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  5. savemoney

    savemoney

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    Saw this interesting concept on FB Good insect control
    [​IMG]
     
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  6. papadave

    papadave

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    I refuse to let my dogs in the garden.
    Not purposely.
     
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  7. lukem

    lukem

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    Currently have 51 layers (21 soon to be "retired"), 160 meat birds, and 10 turkeys (first time with those).
     
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  8. savemoney

    savemoney

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    I wish you well. I tried the meat bird and turkey thing. I didn't come close to breaking even with cost compared to what I could buy domestic chicken at the butcher shop. The only part that worked well for me was eggs. Nothing like those home fresh eggs!
    Once I processed the meat chickens, my family wouldn't eat them. You would have thought I was trying to feed them a pet.
     
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  9. lukem

    lukem

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    Neither do we...and that's fine. They taste better and I know what they've be fed, not fed, and how they were raised....and that's worth something.
     
  10. Genius

    Genius

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    We used to have almost 100 layers. My wife was able to move all the eggs with people on standby if she ever had extras. After about 2 years she got sick of washing and delivering eggs.

    Now we just raise meat birds. We usually raise around 150-200 of them a year. It is some of the best eating chicken that I have ever had. A lot of years we go into winter with no chicken because she has them all sold. We are fortunate to have a processor local who will butcher them for $2 a bird, then I think its another $.50 a bird to have them halve or quarter it. Then another $.50 to have them vacuum seal the bird.
    For $3 a bird to have it ready for the freezer, I won't bother butchering them myself.
     
  11. lukem

    lukem

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    The meat birds consumed 80 lbs of feed and 26 gallons of water yesterday....1 week to go on one batch and 2 weeks on the other.
     
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  12. Genius

    Genius

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    image.jpeg

    I misjudged on these guys... I should get them butchered this week, but I changed the date to half next week and half the following.


    I catch myself every time. I had them scheduled to get butchered this week, but two weeks ago I looked at them and thought they are never going to make the weight....
    Between week 6-8 they put weight on fast.
     
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  13. Genius

    Genius

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    I watered them by hand when I started doing chickens a few years back. It didn't take long to get sick of carrying water.

    I ended up putting in a automatic fountain. It makes life soooooooo much easier.
     
  14. Chvymn99

    Chvymn99 Moderator

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    I've got a chicken killer prowling in my back yard. I'm setting out some live traps tonight. I'm thinking its a coon, but could be a cat. I've had three chickens picked off outside during the daylight or evening hours and lastnight it got inside my coop. It got one, but in the chase it collapsed my original coop door locking it outside with I'm assuming one chicken. It climbed the door and partially left a half eaten chicken on top of my coop. Ideals?

    I just talked to Dad, he's thinking maybe a fox (he called it a swift fox?). ...
     
    Last edited: Aug 15, 2016
  15. Mitch Newton

    Mitch Newton

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    Wouldn't a fox carry off the chicken. While a coon would just eat half and leave the carcass?
     
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  16. Chvymn99

    Chvymn99 Moderator

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    ????? Don't know... First time of seeing this. I'm looking for some insight. Very possible. I'm setting up a game cam and hopefully two live traps tonight.... I'm thinking it's got a taste of blood and knows where easy pickings are. So it'll be back.
     
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  17. lukem

    lukem

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    A fox is gonna get the heck outta dodge....grab and run. A coon or opossum will drag them out of the coop and eat them nearby.
     
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  18. Mitch Newton

    Mitch Newton

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    Post the pics. I'm going with coons or a possum. upload_2016-8-15_8-18-11.png
     
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  19. savemoney

    savemoney

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    I had several birds found in the pen without heads. They were at the edge of the chicken pen. Seems the chickens were not smart enough to keep away from the wire cage. I haven't have birds in some time now but wish I could. My wife isn't agreeable to having them now.
     
  20. mike bayerl

    mike bayerl

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    After 5-6 years of having chickens for eggs only (wife is vegetarian so not a lot of demand for meat) we've gotten to where we need to slaughter some roosters. They are beating the cr@p out of the hens. Any advice for our first time slaughtering? Planning to hang them upside down, slit the neck and let them bleed out. Hot water to loosen the feathers before plucking. I'm good with cleaning them after that.