Showing posts with label plymouth rock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label plymouth rock. Show all posts
Saturday, 16 June 2012
Meat chickens
I killed our first Plymouth Rock rooster 16 June 2012.
He hatched out 15 November 2011 and was so much smaller than the others that I expected him to die in the first few weeks. He did not get feathers until very late in his life, weeks after the girls got feathers. His brother is larger but it is raining hard so I plan to do him another day (or sell him as he is pure bred and a stunning looking bird).
It is difficult killing something I hatched out, fed, watered, and looked after. He was a beautiful looking animal with a calm temperament, had I entered him he could easily have won medals in poultry shows. He lived a calm and happy life, and died an honourable quick death, not at all like the terrible and painful life and death of a commercial meat chicken.
At the age of 7 months he weighed 3.71kg live, when he was ready to go in the freezer he weighed 2.50kg. That is a dressing percentage of just over 67%, not too bad for the first rooster I have processed in such a long long time.
Unfortunately I did not keep records on the food he ate to reach this size. If I were to guestimate based on the feed that he has been consuming over the past few weeks I would say it cost about $19 to get this far (which works out to about $7.30 per kg of chicken). The actual cost must be lower than that as he certainly did not eat this much when he was a week old. Next time I plan to keep stats and keep the young chickens feed completely separate from all other poultry feed so I can work out accurately how much it costs to feed a chicken from hatching to eating size.
Labels:
chooks,
Farm,
farming,
plymouth rock,
sustainability
Plymouth rock egg stats over a year
I was meticulously recording egg statistics (among other things) for our hens every day.
On average our plymouth rocks laid 221 eggs per hen per year. That works out to an average of just over 4 eggs per hen per week.
This average over the year includes each hen moulting twice (they do not lay through a moult), some hens going off the lay as they were injured, each hen going broody and not laying an average of 0.3 times each (they were not allowed to hatch so stopped being broody after 2 weeks or so).
Average number of eggs per hen per month:
April 23
May 21
June 19
July 20
August 16
September 18
October 15
November 17
December 18
January 17
February 18
March 19
These hens were free ranged through the orchard and not provided any extra light or heat. They foraged for between a third and two thirds of their diet depending on the season. Feed costs should be very low on acreage as they can forage for most of their feed.
We had one hen who lays a different looking egg, she laid far more than the others, her eggs were not counted so that we have a more accurate average number of eggs for my old strain of plymouth rocks. I also did not include eggs that were laid while we were away as they were collected by our neighbours and I did not want to impose that they also count eggs as well as feed and water them.
Labels:
chooks,
eggs,
Farm,
farming,
pets,
plymouth rock,
sustainability
Saturday, 12 November 2011
Chicks
We have our first little baby chickens. Such a cute little things. We didn't have great success with our first attempts at an incubator. Only 6 chicks hatched a handful others were very close, I am sure I even heard some of them piping but the temperature changes were just too great for the poor little things. But we still have 6 little cuties to play with.
The breed is Plymouth rock. They are a large breed. Good layers and good for meat too.
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