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Meat Bird Chickens ~~ Cornish Cross ~~ Is It Worth It?

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  • Опубликовано: 25 дек 2018
  • Danny talks about raising meat birds, the cornish cross, and what we liked and didn't like about them. Is it worth it? Would we do meat birds again?
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Комментарии • 195

  • @LivingTraditionsHomestead
    @LivingTraditionsHomestead 5 лет назад +35

    Awesome video Danny! We really like Cornish here. So glad they worked out for you guys. You will love the broad breasted as well for the same reasons. God Bless! Kevin

  • @jr.goodman8530
    @jr.goodman8530 5 лет назад +25

    My wife and I have been watching your channel for a couple years now. We raised our first batch of 50 Cornish Cross chickens, this past summer. They were in a chicken tractor that was moved every day and also went through 50# of feed/ week. They were great tasting and averaged 7-9# ea. @ 9 weeks old. Thank you for putting this info. out. God bless you and your wife.

  • @jeffschueler1304
    @jeffschueler1304 2 месяца назад

    Watching this 5 years after you posted it, the day after processing our first batch of 24 Cornish cross. Our birds ranged 7 to 8.5 lbs., averaging 7.3lbs. Our birds ate about 18 lbs each in feed, but were 9-1/2 weeks, and on grass in a chicken tractor. From our standpoint, definitely worth the work and initial investment. The diy cones from 5 gallon buckets were perfect even for the large birds we ended up with.

  • @surender4ify
    @surender4ify 5 лет назад +13

    Living Traditions Homestead
    did a comparison between Cornish Cross & Freedom Rangers. They did it in the summer & in chicken tractors. They gave all facts & figures each week.

  • @danotrazy
    @danotrazy 4 года назад +5

    The last year I have been watching so many different channels trying to learn..... Danny, I LOVE your vids..... My wife and I are putting our home in the subdivision for sale and have been looking for a small farm... I was worried about my age and health, though Im completely recovered from heart issues. Im 52 and in good shape and health... You have been a inspiration to me.....

  • @macnlace
    @macnlace 5 лет назад +6

    Thanks for the tip about the cone. We are considering cornish crosses for the spring. I'll definitely pick up a turkey cone before butchering time though!

  • @oldguysrule-iv7sh
    @oldguysrule-iv7sh 4 года назад +3

    Danny ask Wanda to do a video on how to can a chicken they look so good please thanks

  • @julieschossow9315
    @julieschossow9315 5 лет назад +2

    We've been wanting to get meat birds. Thanks Danny! I can't believe you caved and went to patreon.

  • @mls9455
    @mls9455 5 лет назад +2

    Beautiful outcome! They are perfect ! Larger than free range but what a great first harvest!

  • @aplaninmind
    @aplaninmind 5 лет назад +2

    I love that you are getting such a good return on your investment and effort. The finished product looks great.

  • @pattifoote1714
    @pattifoote1714 5 лет назад +3

    This is the way to go! We gave family members them as there Christmas gift. They taste so yummy 😋, and so short of time raising awesome meat.

  • @Tara-id3rk
    @Tara-id3rk 4 года назад

    We have our first flock of meat chickens coming in a month, and we decided on Cornish Cross. We have only had layers, so this will be a new experience :) Glad you were happy with your meat chickens. Good looking finished product!

  • @michaeljones9692
    @michaeljones9692 5 лет назад

    Great harvest. My wife remembered when her grandpa used an ax to kill the old hen for dinner. I almost did not eat any chicken. I was just a so young kid about 8-9 years old. Grandma was a wonderful cook so our family enjoyed a grand feast. My grandfather was a short man, but he was a good farmer and grandma had a kitchen garden. Loved visiting during the summer. You remind me of him.

  • @edieboudreau9637
    @edieboudreau9637 5 лет назад +6

    Yep. Bones make good broth. Thanks for update.

  • @RSJ-Texas
    @RSJ-Texas 5 лет назад +2

    Wow. That is fantastic Danny !

  • @stanmashek3085
    @stanmashek3085 4 года назад +5

    HI DANNY THESE CHICKENS GROW SUPER FAST I RAISED 47 AND THEY WERE EATING 50 POUNDS A FEED A DAY AND THAT WAS WITH HOLDING FEED EVERY 12 HOURS. AT 64 DAYS OLD THEY WEIGHTED CLOSE TO 8 POUNDS EACH. THE MEAT IS THE BEST YOU CAN GET TENDER. I AM GOING TO TRY THEM AGAIN THE SPRING BUT DONT WANT THEM TO GET THIS BIG TO BIG TO FRY ALMOST LIKE COOKING A TURKEY HAHA. I THINK I CAN GET THEM TO AROUND 5 POUNDS IN 6 WEEKS MAYBE A FEW DAYS LESS. YOU ARE RIGHT THEY DO EAT ALLOT BUT THEY GROW SO FAST TOO.

  • @gingerreid8569
    @gingerreid8569 5 лет назад

    Fabulous! We just bought 8 cornish chicks and plan to try our hand at raising and harvesting good meat for our homestead!

  • @shonitagarcia3222
    @shonitagarcia3222 5 лет назад

    Beautiful chickens! I haven't even seen 8-lbs. + Chickens in the store since the early 90s late 80s! These are amazingly beautiful. I think no matter what you did to raise them up, they are your own home grown deliciousness. And I know homegrown, nothing's better, nothing's fresher than homegrown. So happy for y'all! Love it! Thanks for sharing.

    • @Lonewolf_1776
      @Lonewolf_1776 5 лет назад

      Go to the store and look for Perdue Oven stuffer but eat at your own risk!

  • @ourselfreliantlife
    @ourselfreliantlife 5 лет назад +2

    Thanks for the information, Danny! I appreciate all the advice. Especially the part about avoiding chicken manure on my face.😆👍

  • @anashomestead5919
    @anashomestead5919 5 лет назад +2

    Good Morning. Those are some big chicken dinners! Hope you all had a lovely Christmas Day!

  • @50shadesofgreen
    @50shadesofgreen 5 лет назад +3

    Them sure are big birds !! Thanks for sharing 👨‍🌾🐔🎥👌🛐

  • @RockingCHomestead
    @RockingCHomestead 5 лет назад +2

    Good looking birds. I think I have the wife talked into getting some meat chickens next year. Great video.

  • @jimsgardensandrabbitry
    @jimsgardensandrabbitry 5 лет назад +4

    Nice birds, Danny and you can tell in the video you are happy. Would be interesting if you could give a total cost of the birds when you are done processing.
    Blessings,
    Jim

  • @JamesandMercyDavis
    @JamesandMercyDavis 2 года назад

    Just starting out our little homestead, and stumbled across your channel! Doing some research! Thank you for sharing !

  • @HoneyHollowHomestead
    @HoneyHollowHomestead 5 лет назад +4

    I have always heard that they do not free range well, but I did see where Justin Rhodes raised them with a movable shelter and had success.

  • @fourdayhomestead2839
    @fourdayhomestead2839 5 лет назад

    Awesome video. I've done mine both pen & free range (chx tractor) .. The tractor way was less messy, but amount of feed didn't change much. Huge both ways. 10-12# was butcher weight. Turkey's were 38-47#. Its worth it..

  • @sharonbasquez6993
    @sharonbasquez6993 5 лет назад +1

    Thank you Danny!

  • @goatsofwar7181
    @goatsofwar7181 2 года назад

    This is awesome! I actually have 24 cornish X in 2 5x8 chicken tractors in week 5 right now. WE use the Furtrell nutribalancer and combined with moving them daily it makes the feed stretch a bit.

  • @janpenland3686
    @janpenland3686 5 лет назад

    Thanks Danny. If I had the room for meat birds and egg birds I would give the CC's a shot. Those are some huge chickens! Unfortunately I don't, so I guess I''ll be eating the roosters and the hens that don't produce well for my son and me. I will say that game fowl is some of the best tasting chicken I've ever had but they are small sized. Can't wait to see how the CC's do for you in the hotter months. Much Love

  • @KahlestEnoch
    @KahlestEnoch 5 лет назад +9

    Thanks for the video Danny, also you can ferment the feed and make it last longer so it won't cost so much on feed.

    • @ajhernandez945
      @ajhernandez945 2 года назад

      Please explain I have 34 at 4 weeks and feed cost is crazy

  • @michaelwhiteoldtimer7648
    @michaelwhiteoldtimer7648 5 лет назад +2

    man these sure grow fast, they look really good.

  • @jamesbreedlove6396
    @jamesbreedlove6396 5 лет назад +2

    Thanks just bought some today

  • @charlesmartin7347
    @charlesmartin7347 4 года назад

    Wow all that chicken.
    Great job.
    I'm totally sold.

  • @debarnold5019
    @debarnold5019 5 лет назад +8

    We did a broadbreasted turkey last year and ended up with a 40 pound turkey dressed. We got them early in the spring and butchered them the week before Thanksgiving. The meat was outstanding, but in the future I wlll get them early to mid-summer so they are not so big.

    • @amberdunn312
      @amberdunn312 5 лет назад +1

      How do you cook a bird so big?

  • @glennelliott7009
    @glennelliott7009 3 года назад

    My friend has done the white Turkey and there massive and protective. Great birds to harvest.

  • @jodyirwin1046
    @jodyirwin1046 2 года назад

    Super information. Thank you!

  • @markramirez9275
    @markramirez9275 Год назад

    Thank you for the information will apply this in my homestead in Chihuahua Mexico.

  • @ryanleayman801
    @ryanleayman801 5 лет назад +2

    Amazing. Convinced I’m gonna raise a few at least

  • @zx900steve
    @zx900steve 3 года назад +1

    Yes. I did these last year. The amount of manure they produced was epic. The flies and the stink were an added bonus! Urban homesteaders be careful with these in chicken tractors..... neighbors may not be thrilled with the smells if your not careful. Otherwise, what a wonderful protein source mostly anyone can do!!

  • @countreegirl
    @countreegirl 5 лет назад +3

    That's awesome!! I'll bet that's some good eating!!

  • @wendy54321
    @wendy54321 5 лет назад +1

    Those chickens are amazing.

  • @mfahrney1
    @mfahrney1 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks for sharing ♡

  • @splittail74
    @splittail74 5 лет назад +3

    That looks really good

  • @beckyjo1956
    @beckyjo1956 5 лет назад +2

    Ha, had to laugh at the visual you gave us, will make a note for future reference!! lol..

  • @FlutyLickHomestead
    @FlutyLickHomestead 5 лет назад +1

    Those are nice birds!! It’s unbelievable how fast those grow!! Me and my grandpa bought 115 of those once for 50 cents each. My oh my we didn’t know what we had gotten into!! But there was chicken in every freezer

  • @jeffboothe2102
    @jeffboothe2102 Год назад

    Love the warning at the end. 🤣

  • @edwardruiz50
    @edwardruiz50 Год назад

    Thank you brother, good video 👍

  • @entrepreneursfinest
    @entrepreneursfinest Год назад

    Those are picture perfect! We're going a little different direction with 98% free range birds so the Cornish is not an option. We'll be running double the birds and if we can get 3 to 4 lbs a bird I'll be really happy.

  • @dfishman76
    @dfishman76 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks for the info

  • @kimcouch8285
    @kimcouch8285 5 лет назад

    Love Cornish cross! Getting American gennie hogs this weekend.

  • @KCARanchHomestead
    @KCARanchHomestead 4 года назад +1

    Great video! I hope the wife does a video with the canning of the chicken and broth. Thanks.

  • @FoodForestPermaculture
    @FoodForestPermaculture 5 лет назад

    Nice chickens . Happy New Year .

  • @gerrymarmee3054
    @gerrymarmee3054 5 лет назад

    I loved the last minutes! The hazards of processing! On a serious note, there are roasted birds on sale in stores that are cheaper. These are “loss leaders”. They get people into the store so they will buy something else at high prices. So be careful you don’t buy other items at a higher price, because that is the stores intent. If you can raise your own, there are ways to lessen the cost of feed. Research it, and you will benefit from home good home raised food without chemicals. Also, learn from Danny and Wanda how to use every bit of the bird. So much can be done with the entire bird to feed you. You WILL save money.

  • @sherrywatkins308
    @sherrywatkins308 3 года назад

    Lol I got 20 my first time going to raise them for more of the chickens to cross and make them this coming year but I'm amazed at how they grow

  • @helenboula3538
    @helenboula3538 3 года назад

    I absolutely love cornish hens they are so delicious

  • @ymehair
    @ymehair 2 года назад

    Thanks for all the tips that you shared. Will for sure not have my face near the top area. LOL Never heard of that but knowing me I will have that happen to me. LOLOL God Bless.

  • @barbarafritchie2000
    @barbarafritchie2000 5 лет назад +1

    I used to raise these also. 👍🏻

  • @newdayfarm9463
    @newdayfarm9463 5 лет назад

    Nice harvest.

  • @rontiemens2553
    @rontiemens2553 3 года назад

    We did three batches of 24 in the warmer weather this year and had them in a 12x5 Suscovitch-style chicken tractor that we moved at least once a day. The cornish cross chickens are LAZY! They might eat a little grass, but usually they just lie around and eat the feed. With chicken tractors mortality is a problem. Even on the flattest ground, predators reach under and kill the birds, especially when they are less than 4-5 weeks old. That is something that is not talked about a whole lot. Our chickens after nine weeks were in the 5 lb range. Some a few ounces more, some a few ounces less. We kept the feed in the tractor 12 hours a day, and 24 hours a day the last two weeks. We always kept fresh water available to them as well.

  • @piahess9738
    @piahess9738 5 лет назад

    Wow these are some fantastic big chickens.Great way to can the meat in thier own broth.Good luck doing the rest of them.And I will remember not to put my head over one in a cone.Thanks for the heads up Danny.Ha ha I made a FUNNY.I call it pulling a Lucy.Have you heard of squeezing the neck and pinching and disconnecting the head from the spine thus bleeding a quail out in a bucket? A Homesteader said it's less stressful,and the most humane way to dispatch thier quail.Less stressful than using the cone method.I know I would get an honest answer from you.It took the man a few minutes to pinch and squeeze the quail's neck while it was shaking and I didn't think it was very humane myself.Just wondering.They had been doing this method for awhile now.So I guess this is another method of dispatching,and this is one for quails.Thanks.Be well you two.♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡♡.....

  • @thecovelife5793
    @thecovelife5793 2 года назад

    I totally agree with the cone issue. My CC were way to big for the cones I had. Haha.

  • @papitaalliance856
    @papitaalliance856 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks for the heads up on the 🐥💩!! 😅

  • @grandmalorna9884
    @grandmalorna9884 5 лет назад

    If you let some of the pullets go a few weeks longer, they will dress out at 10-12 pounds. They are so big, they won't fit in a 9x12 pan. Thanks for the advice about the killing cone.

  • @shirleysunshine3319
    @shirleysunshine3319 4 года назад

    We have 10 we are fixing to process and it's Summer the feed cost is less but we did not have a chicken tractor and the clean up was a mess we are currently building one so we do not have to clean up the chicken poop move them every morning fresh grass no poop.

  • @MarkWYoung-ky4uc
    @MarkWYoung-ky4uc 2 года назад

    You can't beat homegrown!

  • @lindaparker4950
    @lindaparker4950 5 лет назад

    Would be good in stew, gumbo, baked or roasted white th vegetables. I could never do this. My parents & grandparents did ! Thank you !!

  • @mayshomesteadchronicles
    @mayshomesteadchronicles Год назад

    I feed our Cornish Cross chickens once a day and they do great! But this is during warmer conditions.

  • @dmark6699
    @dmark6699 2 года назад

    Good Video.

  • @SugarCreekOffGrid
    @SugarCreekOffGrid 5 лет назад

    Wow those are some big chickens!

  • @samfinn487
    @samfinn487 5 лет назад

    THANKS

  • @candiwallace6605
    @candiwallace6605 5 лет назад

    Awesomeness 💜💜👍👍

  • @preppingnotpanicking1899
    @preppingnotpanicking1899 5 лет назад

    That is some nice sized birds.

  • @paulpatterson9043
    @paulpatterson9043 4 года назад +1

    What size freezer bags did you need for those size chickens? Where can I find them? Thank you so much because of this video we just raised our first batch of Cornish also we are at wk 7 almost 8lbs a bird. Thank you so much for your videos.

  • @jacqualynwilloughby8133
    @jacqualynwilloughby8133 5 лет назад +2

    (1st) The Cornish X Rocks Are The "ONLY" Meat Birds I Raise Here On The Homestead...I Buy 50 Birds Every Year, Let Them "Free-Range" Up To 16-18 Weeks, Process Up To 25-35, I End Up With 10-12 Lbs Of Plump Meat Per Bird (AWESOME!!!!) But This Year I Got Busy With Garden, Haying, Etc...The Last 15 Birds I Noticed That At 6 Months Of Age, "ALL" Actually Laid Large White Eggs, 4 Birds Surpriseingly Went "Broody" On Me??!!! (Unheard Of I Am Told) But They Did!!! You Are Correct What They Do In The Killing Cone (LOL) I Have To Use Either Goose or Turkey Cone...The Broad Breasted White Holland Turkey Is The Best Way To Go Danny, I Raise Up 6 White Holland Toms (No Hens Yet) At 6-8 Months They All Go Straight Into Their Own "Freezer Camp"....It Is Worth My Time To Let Them Get To Their Full Weight Potential For Maximum Meat In My Opinion....Was Hoping You Would Show Us Your Chicken Harvest...So Proud Of You Guys For What Y'all Do At "Deep South Homestead".

    • @DeepSouthHomestead
      @DeepSouthHomestead  5 лет назад +1

      We are going to show the chicken harvest on Patreon. RUclips won't let me without demonotizeing the video.

    • @DeepSouthHomestead
      @DeepSouthHomestead  5 лет назад +1

      @james crowe These were raised in a confined area with good fencing.

  • @charmainemontgomery582
    @charmainemontgomery582 5 лет назад

    Those chickens are huge!

  • @oldman9843
    @oldman9843 2 года назад

    Cornish Cross are great, really big chicken and taste great.

  • @poodledaddles1091
    @poodledaddles1091 5 лет назад +3

    Those are some BIG birds, the camera must really add weight! lol! good video

  • @heavenboundhomestead126
    @heavenboundhomestead126 5 лет назад +2

    Man!! that's worse than having egg on your face. Thank you for the good advice. Sounds like spring or summer would be cheaper.

  • @JustLiving2018
    @JustLiving2018 5 лет назад

    Those look good.

  • @glendakay-freetolearnlaugh5520
    @glendakay-freetolearnlaugh5520 3 года назад

    I'm sure glad you warned me about the chicken poop squirt lol. I'm going to be processing mine in about five weeks for the first time. If you butcher them younger are they like the little cornish hens you buy at the store?

  • @kevinmckinley3305
    @kevinmckinley3305 3 года назад

    I tried raising some in a chicken tractor during summer...they don’t like hot weather; even with plenty of water, moving the chicken tractor through pasture grass is good idea I thought; but they stress in the Deep South heat....

  • @alenewalker1188
    @alenewalker1188 3 года назад

    Thanks for the great info. I have 24 Cornish Cross chicks out in the barn and they are just chicks and I need to clean up regularly. I am wondering what is in a Cornish Cross chick that makes them want to just eat so much? I hope I do as well with my birds as you have done with yours.

  • @CBReal1290
    @CBReal1290 3 месяца назад

    Thank you so much for the ending information about the size of the chicken to the cone and the 2 foot geyser of poop possible thank you

  • @midsouthhomestead9180
    @midsouthhomestead9180 5 лет назад +6

    We are thinking about getting the Cornish cross hens, especially after watching your video and Living Traditions video. Thanks for the information on the cone. Someone comment that they would use a turkey cone. Thanks. Rhonda

  • @PS-zx9km
    @PS-zx9km 3 года назад

    For sustainability, would it be better to raise a breed you don't have to depend on a hatchery to get? What is the best heritage breed you have raised. I'm not as experienced as you. Thanks for your and Wanda's insight.

  • @rachealrumbo4441
    @rachealrumbo4441 5 лет назад

    Wow

  • @johnliberty3647
    @johnliberty3647 4 года назад +2

    I found that processing early works best for Cornish X unless you have a need for a large bird. The sooner you process the less feed you buy. I do Cornish Game Hen week 4 processing. Some I let go another week and its the size of a normal sized bird with more meat on the bone. I have 18 (2 died early, a neighbor bought 5 and I gave her the 2 extra) that are a week and a half old. I will start processing one a day from Cornish Game Hen sized to where ever I finish up.
    Did you skin yours? I do no see the skin if its on them. I skin mine because the work it takes to preserve the skin is not worth the value of the skin. I realize others have a different preference so to each his own. Plucking is not fun, I do not raise enough chickens to justify the price of mechanical plucker. I do not like heating up water to the boiling point just to dunk them... and the smell is kinda bad from doing that.

  • @jpadams02
    @jpadams02 3 года назад

    Awesome!!! Just about to buy my first 20 meat birds....was questioning by judgement. You sold me on it!

  • @FlomatonFamous
    @FlomatonFamous 3 года назад

    Learned the hard way about the 2ft high pooping lol

  • @rexchilders2265
    @rexchilders2265 5 лет назад

    Chicken tractor is the best way to raise them (my opinion). I couldn't imagine the mess to deal with keeping them in a pen. Also with 24 birds if they're going through 25# of feed a day you're wasting feed. I raise 30 birds in a batch and at 7 weeks they eat 15
    # of feed a day. I don't let them have feed 24 hours a day, and still end up moving my tractors twice a day over the last 2 weeks to cut down on the build up of poop. Those birds will eat everything you put in front of them and more. It just runs right through them. My birds average 6-8# at 8 weeks. John Suscovich has the best break down on raising them, in my opinion. I've tried multiple chicken tractors including Joel Salatin's tractor. I finally ended up staying with the type John Suscovich uses. Easy to move and easy to get the birds in and out. With your skills in building you could build it easily. Enjoy your videos! Always very informative.

  • @jerrylittle8922
    @jerrylittle8922 3 года назад +2

    Danny what do you feed your Cornish Cross chickens?

  • @bubba007sss
    @bubba007sss 4 года назад

    Great job, I have plans on raising meat birds here in the near future.
    How much freezer space do you need for 25 meat birds?

  • @xaras4954
    @xaras4954 Год назад

    I never raised this chicken breed before , but 8 pounds is around 3 and half kilo or so, witch it does not sound super big, I just took two of my Brahma roosters that wore between 8 and 9 months old and one of them was close to 10 kg , and the other around 9kg , after removing everything that I don`t eat , it came close to 8 and half kilo meat per bird. and I found that to be low .

  • @hunter62012
    @hunter62012 5 лет назад +2

    Been raising and butchering cornish cross chickens and broad breasted turkeys for 9 years we butchered 100 plus turkeys and about 2000 chickens a summer for around the area. Seen alot different chickens and turkeys cornish cross the way to go for chickens if your raising them for meat only. The ratio we figured is about 3lbs feed for 1lb meat dressed pull feed away at night and give to them in the morning or theyll eat them selves to dealth. Broad breasted bronze or the broad breasted whites are the best turkeys probably but very delicate first 3 weeks once pasy that they are very hardy but they are very dumb. Joel salatin has alot of good videos out there on pasture poultry on ideas but everyone has their own way dont think theres a right and wrong way as long as your happy with the finished product been watching your videos for a while now love the canning vidoes helped me out a bunch. Cant wait to see more canning vidoes

    • @Christine-777
      @Christine-777 5 лет назад +1

      Thank you for the breakdown!
      Because I am one of those people who developed adult onset allergies, I also react to what the livestock eats.
      My chicken Organic, GMO-free, Soy-free, corn-free feed is $37 per 25 lbs. I've been wanting to raise Cornish Cross for several years because I can't eat any kind of store-bought or standard ranch-raised chicken.
      Because of your breakdown and Danny stating that his grown out chickens eat a bag every other day, raising our own chickens to eat would be cost preventative. Thank you, again, for posting this!
      Much love from Texas! ♡♡♡

  • @tulipsmoran5197
    @tulipsmoran5197 5 лет назад

    Did you have straight run, males only to get to that 8# dressed weight at 8wks? Also did you feed continuously or withhold feed on a 12/12 cycle. Did you withhold food from late after noon on the day before processing? I've not really experienced those issues at processing that you did, but I raise female Cornish X and do keep them in a pen. It's just me so I start processing 25 birds in three batches - 6wks for small rotisserie birds, at 7wks for fryers and at 8wks sometimes 9 wks and carve into separate breasts/legs/thighs. All bones and trimming of course go into stock pot.

  • @seamansj
    @seamansj 4 года назад

    How do you feed the Cornish Cross. Have feed for them all the time or just 12 hours a day? Cause you have some large birds which is good!

  • @danielleterry180
    @danielleterry180 4 года назад

    What did you feed your chickens? I will be doing my first meat chickens this year loved the size of your processed chicken wow just awesome thank you

    • @DeepSouthHomestead
      @DeepSouthHomestead  4 года назад +1

      22 percent chicken feed

    • @danielleterry180
      @danielleterry180 4 года назад

      Deep South Homestead thank you I have crammed so much on my half acre so 25 at a time is all I can do I feel bad I can’t use a chicken tractor but clean the 10x20 run and lay down a lot of hay to keep things clean and use the dirty hay in my compost bins

  • @cardrantspd
    @cardrantspd 3 года назад

    Did you try doing turkeys yet? We just dressed 6 of them, but haven't eaten any yet. Curious how you made out

  • @luisalbertomatosdiaz1475
    @luisalbertomatosdiaz1475 2 года назад

    You can can the chciken completely raw and it will produce its juice.

  • @labreeskarogers1102
    @labreeskarogers1102 3 года назад

    I tried them once and we did not have the time due to work. But I think we may try them agian but with a chciken tractor.