Well, all the meat chickens, anyway, are in the freezers.
I went over to Kevyn's last night about 9:30 and we drank beer and caught roosters (65 of them - he decided to take them along today to cut down on the noise at his place) and then brought the trailer over here and rounded up my meat birds. What a hoot! One should never try to catch roosters when drinking - more beer went to the land wights than to the tastebuds...
We left at 5:30 this morning, and arrived at the processor at about 8. By 8:30 all the birds were unloaded, beheaded and drained - except one. 'Lucky' was a hen that got grabbed in the dark last night by mistake. She came home with us.
I have to say I was impressed with this place. It was run by the Amish, and was very, very clean and professional. The animals were treated with respect - no tossing birds around like footballs here - and the whole thing was very professional. The finished chickens were packed in vacuum sealed bags and chilled - not flash frozen (which is good - makes for a more tender bird). The countryside over there (central Illinois) was verdent, very Amish and very friendly.
My only complaint was the time it took - we didn't get through over there until 4 pm, and so it was 6:30 by the time we got home and got everything unloaded and stored. A very long day, mostly spent sitting in blazing hot parking lots, or driving around and looking over the farms.
We lost 80 birds to predators - only took 121 with me. That's an unacceptable loss rate, and we've just got to do better than that the next time. I was quite surprised that we'd lost so many - I figured maybe 30 were gone, or 50 max. It's tough to get an accurate count of that many free ranging chickens, however, without rounding them up and stressing them out, which we didn't want to do, so the number was a bit of a surprise.
I had half my birds cut - a lot of customers have no clue how to cut up a whole chicken, and that should help sales. It was only $0.40 more to have it done, so I figured we could afford to try it out.
I'm off to the sack - it's been a long day, and promises to be just as long tomorrow, as I have to go and fetch the beef from the plant in Terre Haute. The to the market and to sell steak and chicken. Hopefully lots of steak and chicken.
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