I accidentally stumbled upon these same realizations. I got 2 turkeys just so I could say I grew my thanksgiving dinner. It was so easy and we got so much meat from just the 2 I’m nixing my idea of the Cornish cross for next year and just upping my turkey game!
Thanks for the video. Not many people do videos on turkeys or even talk about their traits. So they are interesting. But there's a big knowledge gap than other poultry. I'm curious if a turkey rooster will protect its hens like how a chicken rooster does? Or how they compare with feed requirements. And is them needing feed help only in the chick stage , or all the way up till grown? Are they quiet enough that you could have them with neighbors and not have them hear or notice them?
Been watching turkey videos all day. Hands down best analysis of why folks should raise meat turkeys.
This is awesome stuff, brother. Keep up the knowledge and great footage!
Thanks for the info - much appreciated! 🦃
I accidentally stumbled upon these same realizations. I got 2 turkeys just so I could say I grew my thanksgiving dinner. It was so easy and we got so much meat from just the 2 I’m nixing my idea of the Cornish cross for next year and just upping my turkey game!
3 years ago! Good God, I'm late but thanks for making the video anyway.
Thanks for the video. Not many people do videos on turkeys or even talk about their traits. So they are interesting. But there's a big knowledge gap than other poultry.
I'm curious if a turkey rooster will protect its hens like how a chicken rooster does? Or how they compare with feed requirements. And is them needing feed help only in the chick stage , or all the way up till grown? Are they quiet enough that you could have them with neighbors and not have them hear or notice them?
Heritage for breeding purposes.
Not a rooster numbnuts