Picked them up this morning, 22 of the hungry little buggers, if all goes well in 6-8 weeks I'll have a freezer full of chicken.
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Originally posted by sesa View PostThey are cornish X, they are supposed to weigh 6-8 lbs in 8 weeks, we shall see
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Originally posted by sesa View PostThey are bred to grow fast, I wouldn't say that they were any more GM than any other breed of chicken.
I'm not saying your chicks are but its worth finding out as we dont/shouldnt buy chickens that have been genetically modified for fast meat . It will be the next thing to go when batt farm are gone I hope
Saying that your chicks in the pic do look greatLast edited by davefromthechipie; 16-04-2009, 08:27 PM.
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Breeding (and feeding) for speed of growth is why factory-farmed ones don't taste of anything. If you grow them a bit slower, they will be healthier, and tastier.
Factory farmed chickens get neither day nor night, but only a perpetual twilight in which they have nothing to do but eat. If you bring them up more like proper chooks, they may grow to size in about 10-12 weeks, without becoming too heavy for immature leg bones, and will be a lot better eating.Flowers come in too many colours to see the world in black-and-white.
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Sesa is in the US. I've complained repeatedly about my US published chicken book, but only because things are done very differently over there and it is a bit irrelevant to anyone starting out in the UK. People buy day-old chicks there (and they are sent via the post ) whereas here we tend to buy point of lay pullets and that isn't something that's often an option in the States. Anyway the fast growing chicks Sesa describes are, I believe, a simple Cornish x Plymouth Rock, which does grow incredibly fast, largely due to the fact that they eat continually with none of the usual chicken behaviour to distract them or use up calories. As a result they lay down meat at an incredible rate and I believe convert feed to meat at an estimate of something like 2lbs of feed to produce one pound of meat. These birds are white too, so have 'clean' looking skin and unobtrusive looking lumpy bits where the feathers have been plucked (note the use of technical terms here). Just to confuse matters even more, what they call a Cornish we call an Indian Game, so it's just a cross of a couple of old fashioned breeds which we're all familiar with. Nothing GM about it at all, just something people have been doing for generations... though we don't know what the chicks are eating.
See, just because I didn't find the book too helpful doesn't mean I didn't read it and pay attention.Last edited by bluemoon; 18-04-2009, 09:55 AM.Into each life some rain must fall........but this is getting ridiculous.
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They are cuties though but I have to say that I prefer to eat something that has had a bit of life to enjoy first...Hayley B
John Wayne's daughter, Marisa Wayne, will be competing with my Other Half, in the Macmillan 4x4 Challenge (in its 10th year) in March 2011, all sponsorship money goes to Macmillan Cancer Support, please sponsor them at http://www.justgiving.com/Mac4x4TeamDuke'
An Egg is for breakfast, a chook is for life
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