Author: Anna & Mark

Dark Cornish economics

Dark Cornish amid weedsWe
decided to try out
Dark
Cornish
cockerels
for our first broiler experiment since they are supposed to be good
foragers and very predator resistant.  It turned out that predator
resistance wasn’t really necessary
in our instance, and our
cockerels
seemed to be lackadaisical foragers.  The meat will be a bit
better for us than storebought since the chickens did consume some
greenery and insects, but we clearly spent more than we would have on
grocery store meat, or on raising Cornish Crosses.




Here are the stats on
the 12 week old birds, which averaged a mere 2.25
pounds dressed weight apiece:



Expenditure Price per bird
Purchasing chicks $2.00
Feed (~14 pounds per bird) $3.64
Total $5.64
Price per pound $2.51



Big producers focus on
the feed to meat conversion ratio, which in our
case was about 6:1.  This is double the average for Cornish Cross
broilers, meaning that our chickens actually consumed twice as much
grain as a similarly sized Cornish Cross would have.  That’s the
precise opposite of the goal of our forest pasture experiment, so we’ll
be moving on to a different breed next year.




Meanwhile, we still have
two thirds of the cockerels bulking up for another month or two. 
I’ll let you know if their figures are any different, and how the 12
week old birds compare in taste to older birds.  Stay tuned!



Our homemade chicken
waterer
kept the
cockerels amused, and we’ve never seen any real aggression beyond
dominance displays.

First entries to our photo contest

Homemade chicken coop with automatic waterer and ramp

Automatic chicken watererWe
love seeing photos of our
homemade chicken
waterers
in action,
so I was thrilled when I got an email from Stephen Brown.  He
wrote:



I’m
submitting several photos of my coop for the Fall contest.  My
waterer is attached to a gallon water bottle at the side of the
run.  A sliding metal door allows easy refill and removal for
cleaning.



His email is a timely
reminder that our 2010 chicken waterer contest will indeed be coming up
in just a few months.  Now’s a great time to get out your cameras
and send in submissions while you’re thinking about it.  The rules
will be similar to those from our
2009 chicken photo contest — I’ll post some real
rules in a few weeks.  Meanwhile, if you haven’t already,
check
out the winners from last year
and get those creative
juices flowing!

Homemade chicken coop from the outside

Flock block review

Flock block

Mark bought a flock block on a whim the last time he
was at the feed store.  The flock block seems to be a new way of
feeding pastured poultry — the food is all glued together with
molasses, so the chickens peck off a bit at a time as they need it.




The chickens adored
their treat, and their normal feed consumption went way down. 
However, I’m not all that impressed by the product.  First of all,
it costs twice as much per pound as traditional feed, and has only 8%
protein.  (I’ve still got the cockerels on 20% protein, although
many people would have switched them to 13% by now.)  I don’t know
if it’s a coincidence, but our cockerels stopped their relentless
growing while nibbling on the flock block and have held a pretty steady
size for the last couple of weeks.




I think that the flock
block’s real purpose is to prevent boredom and the resulting feather
pecking.  You all know where I stand on that — our
automatic chicken waterer is the best solution I’ve
seen for giving chickens something to do.




Has anyone else tried
the flock block?  What did you think?