Raising meat chickens to make more meat chickens

drink88

Chirping
Feb 28, 2023
20
29
51
Southeast Texas
This is my second post. Still replying to folks that have been a great help in my first forum post. Learned a lot.

My second post: I want to raise meat chickens and never have to buy meat chickens again, and instead make my own.

Thinking of buying 15 Jumbo Cornish Cross from Cackle Hatchery. I'm thinking I will have to let at least a portion of them lay eggs (and hope they go broody - otherwise will incubate myself - which is about 4-5 months, so that I can build up numbers while butchering at the same time.

Does anyone have any experience with this, raising enough at a time so that you can keep the numbers up and butcher? Most of what I'm finding is folks buying in bulk, and butchering them all, and then ordering more the next year. I'd prefer to come up with a system where I'm not reliant one anyone else, as we don't know how much longer we'll be able to buy from others before they make it illegal or whatever.

I'm thinking it's still ok to butcher up to a year, although not ideal for various reasons. But after the process is in place, then I can start butchering around 2 - 3 months.

Thanks for your time.
 
I'll try to go into more detail than your other threads.

The Cornish Cross have been developed by selective breeding to very efficiently grow to butcher size in 6 to 8 weeks. They have developed feeding regimens to make that process very efficient. They have been designed to be raised this way for meat. If you keep them longer than 8 weeks they tend to break down because they grow so fast their body can't support them or their heart can't keep up.

One of the big problems is how to keep the parent flocks, the ones that actually lay the eggs these butchered birds hatch from, alive long enough to lay fertile eggs. They spend a lot on research on how to make that happen. They need to restrict the feed enough so they don't eat themselves to death yet eat enough to stay healthy enough to lay hatchable eggs. It is a pretty delicate balance.

Then you have the Ranger types. These were developed to grow fast but live longer and forage better than the Cornish Cross. They can still eat themselves to death but not as bad as the Cornish Cross.

Several people on this forum have tried to keep the Cornish Cross for breeding. Most are unsuccessful but some have managed to get hatching eggs. It is almost unheard of for hens to live long enough to get two laying seasons out of them. People have done this with Rangers. Rangers have problems too but people are generally more successful with Rangers than Cornish Cross.

Some of the more successful people have crossed Cornish Cross or Rangers with dual purpose chickens to develop their own strain of meat birds. The offspring of a cross like this will develop a lot of meat and can still have some of those issues but are usually easier to keep alive. It is not always easy.

Or you can approach this like farmers and others have managed to keep their own self-sustaining flock for thousands of years. Raise dual purpose chickens. These are not as specialized in egg laying as the commercial egg laying chickens but generally don't have the medical issues those chickens are known to have. They don't get as big as the commercial meat birds or Rangers but they don't have those medical issues either. Dual purpose chickens have provided a lot of eggs and meat to small farmers and even some village or town dwellers for thousands of years. I grew up on one of those farms and it seems natural to me.
 
Speaking as someone who managed to get a Cx to laying age and bred successfully, the only thing I consistently got out of the offspring was the Dominant White coloration. About half the first gen were bigger/faster growing than the norm, about half weren't. By Gen 2, the only apparent CX still present in my genetic lines was the [explicative] Dom White.

I just had it pop up in a gen 3 I butchered today at age 9 weeks. Male, approx 1.7#. That's it. 1.7#.

Plenty tasty. "Meat" bird? I wouldn't call it such.
 
More consistent results might be obtained by using White Rock hens bred to a show Cornish cock or even a gamerooster. We did latter for very consistent results although the crosses do not grow as fast as commercially sourced production Cornish cross.
 
I hatched out a half dozen Bresse chicks which are 5 months old at this point; I also bought 6 Rhode Island Red chicks from a guy who has a line of heritage birds the same day the Bresse hatched. The Bresse birds are significantly larger than the RIRs, and have been since about week three.
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I would suggest getting a “dual purpose” breed that leans more towards meat. Many people are happy with Breese or Delaware…I’ve never tried them myself so can’t speak to them more than that. I suspect that with them, like any other dual purpose bird for meat, that you need to be selective where you get them from — most average hatchery birds are going to lean more towards egg laying than meat since hatcheries sell eggs and chicks, not meat.

What I can share is that I am very happy with my New Hampshires from Freedom Ranger hatchery. These particular NH were bred by a gentleman named Henry Knoll for many decades before they ended up at Freedom Ranger hatchery. I have live weights between 6-9 lbs at 13-14 weeks, which is very large for a dual purpose bird.
 

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