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Matt McSpadden wrote:Hi Josh,
I am not familiar with the Kosher King, but there are a handful of dual purpose heritage breeds that get pretty decently big. The New Hampshire Red. The Black Australorp. The Buff Orpington. And I almost forgot the Jersey Giant.
***Edit - Came across this article that talks about 12 heritage breeds that could be for meat. Gives stats and info about them. https://homesteadersofamerica.com/heritage-meat-chicken-breeds/
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Timothy Norton wrote:I do not have experience with Kosher kings, I hadn't heard of the breed before now.
Doing a little lookup, it appears to be a hybrid between a Barred Rock and a Sussex. It may not breed true if you are planning on trying to have a self sustaining breed.
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Jay Angler wrote:My basic understanding (which could have gaps) is that the modern Meat chicken is referred to as "the Cornish Cross" because the breeders maintain a "Cornish" flock for one side of the cross, and a different breed for the other side. The idea is to give "cross breed vigor" to the chicks, which a single gene pool doesn't give.
Problems: The birds for both sides of the cross have to be raised very carefully with restricted food or they will all be too fat to be effective at having sex or laying eggs.
You now have 2 gene pools to protect and ensure that within each, you don't get inbreeding symptoms.
You need triple or more infrastructure so that only the birds you wish to mingle, can do so.
Thus, for personal use, I would want to compromise. One fairly easy way to do that would be to choose a good, heavy weight breed, for your "moms", and then just buy one or two heavy weight roosters of another breed every 3-5 years to provide the "cross" for the layers who are your current meat moms.
You would still have to occasionally have your meat moms breed true to replace themselves, so that would require a same-breed rooster, and you would again want to occasionally source a rooster from outside your flock to keep things working well.
This sort of "trading roosters" would have been done a lot when most people lived on or near small farms. It was a two way street!
With any situation like this, watching for both positive and negative characteristics is important. There was all sorts of bad press about meat chickens spontaneously breaking their legs in the past. Modern meat chicken leg bones are easily twice the size of any of our layer leg bones.
I will also add my own pet rant here: even small operations for *many* types are birds are incubating all the eggs (so the moms will keep laying instead of setting and brooding) to the point that many birds are incapable of setting and raising a clutch. We've been having our Muscovy moms raise both Khaki Campbell ducklings and Geese in an effort to reverse that trend. We're hoping that with some generations of offspring who were at least raised by birds, they'll start to re-awaken those skills. Yes, it will reduce the number of eggs they lay, but incubators are expensive and don't seem to last very long if you're buying the home-scale ones, and you can loose a lot of eggs if there's a power outage. We aren't purists by any means - we're just trying develop options!
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Carla Burke wrote:Cornish Cross are specifically bred for factory-style farming. They grow so fast their legs give out, and they can't walk, so they sit in front of their food in their own excrement, and left to their own devices, will die of heart attack or disease, in a month or two, after reaching maturity. We tried raising them ethically, and while they survived much longer - maybe 4months? - allowing/ encouraging them to forage, free-range, not allowing them to simply eat themselves to death, before slaughtering, the meat, in those extra couple months, became tough and... rangey. The reason we harvested them, then? They were, despite our best efforts, all becoming crippled. Their legs, even with the exercise, and slowed growth, didn't develop enough to keep them upright, but their breasts grew disproportionately, so they became horribly top-heavy. It was heart breaking to see. I can't ever, in good conscience, recommend them.
Instead, we keep Orpingtons (or favorite), Austrolorps(2nd favorite), Barred Rock(haven't been great mamas, for us), and hope to someday be able to afford another heritage breed - Red/Freedom Rangers. They're slower developing, but supposed to be hardy, great foragers, and excellent meat, with decent egg production. But, they're pricier, around here.
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Josh Hoffman wrote:The ones you listed that you like and have experience with, do they seem to be heat tolerant? I would guess I am 2 zones above you from what I can tell.
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Carla Burke wrote:
Josh Hoffman wrote:The ones you listed that you like and have experience with, do they seem to be heat tolerant? I would guess I am 2 zones above you from what I can tell.
We've never had trouble with any of them, weather-wise. They've all done very well, here, and our temps range from the coldest being about -20°F on those (thankfully) fewer severe winter nights to about 114°F, with the hottest summer 'feels like' temps. The actual heat here often hangs out in the mid to upper 90s, occasionally going over 100°F for several days at a time. But, even with that added misery of the humidity, they've all been fine, simply seeking out shade.
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Josh Hoffman wrote:Wow, those temps are really something. Thank you, Carla. I really appreciate the information you shared with me. You may as well come on down to MS and have a mild winter if you are having those hot summer temps. Unless you like the cold weather .....
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