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Amy K Fewell | Homesteading for the Kingdom

Amy K Fewell | Homesteading for the Kingdom

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Easy Steps to Raising Meat Chickens

April 27, 2020 · In: chickens, homesteading

How to Raise Meat Chickens
How to Raise Meat Chickens
How to Raise Meat Chickens
How to Raise Meat Chickens
How to Raise Meat Chickens
How to Raise Meat Chickens
How to Raise Meat Chickens
How to Raise Meat Chickens
How to Raise Meat Chickens
Easy Steps to Raising Meat Chickens

Raising meat chickens seems like a daunting task, but really, it’s quite easy. If you’ve ever wanted to learn how to raise chickens for meat, this is the time to do it. Because, what better time than now!

If you’re here, it means that you’re probably realizing just how broken our food system is. And why it’s important to take control of your own meat source. You can do this by raising meat chickens on your own property. No really, you can do it! Let’s walk through these easy steps to get you started.

Easy Steps to Raising Chickens for Meat

The Basics of Raising Meat Chickens

While meat chickens are pretty easy to raise, there are some things to consider before diving in head first. Make sure you understand the process, and you’ll be good to go. When you’re ready, you can learn about 16 of my favorite meat chicken breeds here.

Here are a few things to consider before you get started.

  • Most meat chickens grow to full maturity between 8 and 12 weeks of age. If you choose to go with a slower growing heritage breed of meat chicken, they can take up to 6 months to reach a large enough bird for the table.
  • Commercial breed super hybrid meat chickens (like the CornishX) do not reproduce offspring or eggs on their own. And they also don’t survive well after the 10 or 12 week mark of age.
  • There are a few main breeds for meat chickens––CornishX (like what you buy at the store), Freedom Rangers or Red Broilers (which have darker meat than store chicken), and Heritage Hybrids (like the Delaware Enhanced). All are great options, but the heritage hybrids and Freedom/Red broilers do take about 12 weeks versus the 8 week CornishX.
  • Meat chickens eat a lot of feed. That is, unless you are raising them on pasture. Pasture can be as simple as a 1/2 acre yard! Even still, they eat more feed than egg laying chickens. You can also learn how to make your own chicken feed.
  • You’ll need to purchase butchering supplies. And some of them aren’t cheap. Or, you can do things the old fashioned way. It just goes slower. We’ll go over both methods.
  • Some meat breeds are super ugly. Yeah, like, super ugly (like the CornishX). They don’t have a bunch of feathers. They lounge around worse than a teenager during the summertime. Other breeds are more active (like the Red Broilers and Delawares) therefore making them better foragers.
  • Meat birds have higher mortality rates. Especially if you get the big commercial breeds, like the CornishX. Be prepared to lose some chicks, and even some mature chickens. They can be fragile due to their genetic make up. So keep this in mind when trying to figure out how many to order. However, people have raised plenty of batches without losing any chicks at all. Just know that this is a possibility.
10 Easy Steps to Start Raising Chickens
How to Raise Meat Chickens

Meat Chicken Housing and Feed

Raising meat chickens doesn’t require much more of an effort than raising regular chickens. They’ll need ample housing that is large enough for your chickens to move about. You can house them in a coop with a chicken run. Or you can house them in a pasture raising system on grass. The method of housing and feeding meat chickens is really up to how you’re choosing to raise them. Let’s go over them.

Raising Meat Chickens on Pasture

Most people will choose to raise their meat chickens on pasture. You can raise them anywhere, but pasture will produce a more natural bird for the table. And if you’re putting in all this effort, why not go with all natural! Natural chickens have more nutrients than birds raised completely on feed.

You can create a pasture ranging set up like the one used on Polyface Farms (above), or like the chicken tractors that we have, created by John Suscovich. Either set up will work well for you.

Move your chicken tractor each day to new pasture. Incorporate electric netting, like the one seen above, to give your chickens a bigger space to range. This also allows for you to only move them every few days, rather than every day.

Offer one feeding of chicken feed each day to your birds if they are foraging. We often like to do this in the late afternoon so that they forage first and then eat feed secondarily. Many meat birds can be lazy, so doing this can help teach them to eat pasture before feed. This will also cut down on your feed bill.

Your chicken’s feed consumption will depend on how many birds you have. But generally it’s 1/4 lb+ of feed per bird per day.

Raising Meat Chickens on Feed Only

If you are choosing to raise your meat chickens in more of a small or confined area, you can raise them off of grower feed and kitchen scraps alone. They will eat more feed, therefore you’ll go through feed a lot more. Make sure you save those kitchen scraps, as they contribute to the feed consumption! Free food is great for chickens!

Many people also choose to constantly feed meat chickens so that they grow quicker. Some do the 12 hours of free choice feed (a feeder constantly filled for 12 hours), then 12 hours off of feed. This gives their digestive tract a break, but allows them to eat as much feed as they want to during the first 12 hours period of time.

The biggest issue you’ll have with raising meat chickens in confinement is that, well, they poop. A lot. A lot of poop, ya’ll. So keep this in mind when choosing how to raise your meat birds. They will need to be moved, or their area cleaned, often.

Your meat chickens should be fed a grower feed of at least 19% while you are raising them.

Clean, Fresh Water is Important

Believe it or not, clean, fresh water for your meat chickens is very important. Meat chickens can get dehydrated quickly, so they’ll go through a lot of water. Since they consume more food than a regular chicken, they also require more water.

Meat Chickens with Regular Flock

Can My Meat Birds Live with My Regular Flock?

Believe it or not, if you have a big enough set up, your meat birds can live with your regular flock. However, they will probably grow slower. We have successfully grown random meat birds in with our regular flock. They just eat regular feed and free-range. This gave us birds for the table in about 10 to 14 weeks or so (depending on the breed).

While I wouldn’t recommend it, it absolutely is attainable if you’re looking to only raise a few meat birds at one time. It helps to not have to set up a completely different area for your birds. And it’s easier during chore time!

The Basics: Raising, Breeding and Processing Meat Rabbits
Raising Meat Chickens on Pasture

Supplies for Dispatching Your Meat Chickens

So you’ve raised your meat birds to full maturity, and now it’s time to butcher them. What on earth will you need, and how do you do it? While I’d love to be able to tell you step-by-step, that’s hard to do in a blog post. Believe it or not, I don’t have my own video (yet) on chicken butchery. But the wonderful world of YouTube is full of plenty of videos to watch on chicken butchery. I’d also encourage you to check out the Homesteaders of America membership program, which has a full, in-depth video by Joel Salatin about raising and butchering meat chickens.

Before you go skipping off into Youtube world though, let’s go through some of the things you’ll need for processing your birds.

  • chicken plucker
  • chicken scalder (or a large stock pot that a chicken can fit into)
  • chicken kill cones
  • heavy duty kitchen shears
  • good quality knife
  • poultry shrink bags for the freezer
  • a good processing table (with a sink and trash bin!) or like this one

You’ll also consider having rubber/latex gloves if you don’t want to get blood on your hands. Some people can have a skin sensitive reaction when their hands are processing chickens for more than 30-minutes. I’m one of those people! So I choose to wear gloves.

If you prefer to butcher chickens the old fashioned way…

Then you really only need a stock pot full of hot water, a very sharp axe, and your hands for plucking!

Don’t forget to keep the feet!

And all the other goodies too. The livers, hearts, gizzard. The best part of raising your own chickens for meat is that you get to keep all of the things you wouldn’t normally get with a chicken at the store. You can use these things to make extremely nutritional homemade chicken bone broth. Or, better yet, you can learn how to cook them for eating. You can also use these traditional discards as dog food!

Make sure you don’t feed your chickens for at least 12 hours before butchering them. It will make for a much cleaner processing of the bird.

Chicken feet for bone broth, raising chickens for meat

That’s basically it! Make sure you feed them each day, give them fresh water each day, and move them frequently . . . and you’re good to go! Just about anyone can raise their own meat chickens. And what a liberating feeling it is to own your food system!

Other posts you may enjoy:

  • Homemade Chicken Pot Pie with Rustic Crust
  • How to Make and Pressure Can Chicken Bone Broth
  • Raising Broiler Chickens: Breed, Feed, and Housing
  • Rabbit Care Basics for the Beginner
  • The Basics: Raising, Breeding, and Processing Meat Rabbits
  • 10 Easy Steps to Start Raising Chickens
Easy Steps to Raising Meat Chickens

By: Amy K. Fewell · In: chickens, homesteading · Tagged: chickens, meat chickens

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Kathy says

    May 8, 2022 at 3:21 pm

    My husband and I are considering raising meat chickens for our freezer and I’ve started the process by doing my ‘homework’ — Thanks for a good article.

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I'm Amy. I love organic food but I love cookies too I love Jesus and His grace. I believe broken people make the biggest impact in the world when they share their stories. I believe in stories, and I'm sharing mine.

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@amy.fewell

Culture has been the topic in a lot of personal co Culture has been the topic in a lot of personal conversations recently. The culture of our society. The culture of the church. The culture of the family. In fact, I should totally talk about this topic more in-depth soon, and how it all coincides together. But today I am reminded of a conversation my husband and I had a few weeks back.

As we were talking about the “last days”, I posed this question—what if culture goes back to Bible culture and it’s all literal? 

We live in a very unique world and country. We expect none of the things we use and love everyday to disappear. But if there’s one thing I know and have witnessed, it’s that all of this is so fragile that it could disappear overnight. Literally. Within seconds. Gone. And suddenly a modern culture would wake up to a culture that pre-dates the 1800s. 

And so my question is this—what if God is preparing His church culture (there’s a shift happening) so that the church will be prepared for the societal culture shock when it happens? 

We’d all be preparing a lot differently, wouldn’t we?
For years, I’ve talked about fragile supply chains For years, I’ve talked about fragile supply chains, rising input costs, foreign dependence, and the vulnerabilities built into our modern food system.

Now, the USDA has confirmed the first domestic case of New World Screwworm in a Texas calf. The screw worm is a parasite that is flesh eating in nature. 

If you’ve listened to my interview with AJ Richards, you may remember him sounding the alarm about this months ago. Many people dismissed it as just another agricultural issue happening somewhere south of the border. But AJ explained something important—this is a food system concern, and it could cause a collapse of the already historically low beef herd in the USA.

These farmers are already facing years of drought, high feed costs, regulatory pressure, and economic uncertainty. When breeding stock leaves the system, rebuilding takes years—not months.

Now add a parasite that can rapidly spread through livestock populations and historically cost producers enormous losses. It may not affect the local small farmer who can monitor his herds easier (and probably has healthier herds). But it will absolutely affect bigger herds that are already struggling.

This is why I continually encourage people to think beyond the grocery store. The big ag food system is not one giant crisis away from collapse. It’s thousands of small pressures accumulating at the same time. Together, they create a system that becomes increasingly expensive, increasingly centralized, and increasingly vulnerable. 

Know your local farmer, raise some of your own food, learn skills, build community networks, and create resilient local food economies before they’re needed.

This is why so many of us have spent years talking about food sovereignty and homesteading. Not because we expect disaster around every corner, but because history repeatedly shows that resilient communities weather storms better than dependent ones.

Whether it’s pest, drought, inflation, fertilizer shortages, disease, or a disruption we haven’t seen yet, the lesson remains the same—the future belongs to communities that can feed themselves. And every year, that lesson becomes harder to ignore.
I have nothing to say. Just a pretty photo dump f I have nothing to say.

Just a pretty photo dump for old time IG sake.

The era where we followed homesteaders and farmers because their content was beautiful and practical and took us to a peaceful place. 

This is my peaceful place.
Most homesteaders raise meat chickens. Very few e Most homesteaders raise meat chickens.

Very few ever stop to ask, “What happens if I can’t buy chicks next year?”

For generations, families didn’t depend on hatcheries to fill their freezer. They developed breeding systems that allowed them to raise meat birds year after year, right from their own homestead.

That’s exactly why we began experimenting with a two-breed meat chicken system.

The goal isn’t to compete with a Cornish Cross. You can’t compete when it comes to saving time and money. The goal is resilience.

A good breeding program allows you to maintain your own flock, hatch your own chicks, improve genetics over time, and continue producing quality meat birds without relying on outside sources. It puts one more piece of your food security back into your own hands.

This approach combines the strengths of two different breeds—one contributing growth and carcass qualities, the other contributing fertility, mothering ability, hardiness, and long-term sustainability. The result is a practical system that can provide meat chickens year-round while allowing you to retain breeding stock for future generations.

If you’ve ever wondered how homesteaders raised meat chickens before modern hatcheries, or if you’ve been looking for a more sustainable long-term poultry plan, this article is for you. It utilizes modern Cornish cross broilers, while having a dual-purpose system back up. 

🐓Comment SYSTEM and I’ll send it directly to your inbox.
Mullein is one of those herbs that often gets over Mullein is one of those herbs that often gets overlooked—growing wild along fence rows, in pastures, and even in places most people would call “weedy.” But for generations, it has been one of the most beloved herbs for the lungs, respiratory support, and overall herbal wellness.

Its soft, velvety leaves and tall flower stalk are easy to spot once you know what you’re looking for—and once you learn how to use it, you may never walk past it the same way again.

Mullein has traditionally been used to:

🌿 Support the lungs and respiratory tract
🌿 Encourage the body to clear mucus naturally
🌿 Soothe irritated throats
🌿 Infuse into oil for ear support
🌿 Dry and preserve for teas, tinctures, and the herbal cabinet

And one of my favorite things about it? It grows abundantly and asks for very little.

There’s something deeply beautiful about learning the plants around us—what they are, how to harvest them well, and how God designed creation with so much practical goodness right in our own fields and gardens.

If mullein grows near you, this is your sign to get familiar with it.

Read the full article on my website, and learn how to identify it, grow it, harvest it, and start using it in your herbal routine.

🌿 Comment MULLEIN to have it sent directly to your inbox.

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