Jun 20, 2016
We will start by going back in time by 8 weeks to April 22. That
will be our starting point, Day 0 for the new chicks arriving on
the farm.
Delivered via mail, the newborn chicks start out their life on the
farm in the comfort of the brooder. There they enjoy the warmth of
an electric light as the play in wood shavings all day while they
eat, gain weight and feather out.
As we move ahead to Day 20, the chicks aren't as fragile as they
once were, and they are now started to get crowded in their
brooder. That means that it's time to move out, and the chicks head
out to pasture where they touch grass for the first time, spending
their first night in the open air under the protection of a chicken
tractor.
The chicks will spend the next 35 days here, each day getting moved
to a fresh patch of pasture, leaving their nutrient rich manure
behind.
It's now late spring or summer, and despite their growth some will
die along the way from the damp, the heat or the raccoon that got a
little too close.
The others will grow bigger and bigger eating bugs, grass, and the
grain that you the farmer provides them each day.
When the chicks are around 8 and half weeks old they will have
converted all that food into body mass and each bird will weigh
around 6.5 lbs.
It's a pretty fast weight gain, in a pretty short amount of time -
it's what the Cornish Cross were breed for.
Now at just over 2 months old, the chickens live in the field, and
their life in general, is almost over.
Because that day has arrived; it's now time to process the birds -
taking that living breathing chicken, and converting it into food
for humans.
When the birds reach this stage of their life you as the farmer
have a couple options for processing them.
One is to process the birds on farm.
The other is taking the birds to a local processor.
That's how Darby processes his birds, and today we'll pick our
story right here at this stage. We'll zoom in on the day before,
the day of, and the day after processing his birds. You'll get an
inside look at everything that takes place between the chickens
last hours on pasture to their return back to the farm as sellable
meat in shrink wrapped bags.
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