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Pastured Poultry Systems. Brad Burbaugh Duval County Extension Service. Overview. Alternative Production Choosing Meat Breeds Equipment Alternative Poultry Systems Supplies Predator and Disease Control Processing The Business of Pastured Poultry. Alternative Poultry Production.
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Pastured Poultry Systems Brad Burbaugh Duval County Extension Service
Overview • Alternative Production • Choosing Meat Breeds • Equipment • Alternative Poultry Systems • Supplies • Predator and Disease Control • Processing • The Business of Pastured Poultry
Alternative Poultry Production • Pastured Poultry • Moveable pens • Several options • Free range poultry • Non-confinement system • USDA definition = out-of-doors for 51% of their lives • Organic poultry (very difficult) • Begins with day old chicks • Feed, pasture and processor must be certified
Elements of Pastured Operation • Production, processing, and marketing • Chickens forage for food • Fresh grass = portion of diet • Fresh pasture offered daily or weekly • Fresh air and exercise when foraging • Manure is spread evenly onto the pasture
Pastured Poultry Pros • Can start small and grow • Poultry build soil fertility • Strong demand for pastured poultry exists • Can be run by one person; kids can help • Provides sustainably produced meat • Low capital investment to get started • Poultry can attract customers for other products
Pastured Poultry Cons • Labor intensive – especially on-farm processing • Mostly seasonal • Limited support system of suppliers, contractors and suppliers • Weather-related stress and predation • Reliable processing facilities hard to find
Choosing Meat Breeds • Unlike with layers, there are limited options • Cornish X • Other hybrid varieties (Barred Silvers.etc) • Dual purpose varieties (Buffs, Barred Rocks)
Advantages Grows out in about 8 weeks. Lower feed costs than some other breeds. Larger breast meat. Disadvantages More leg & heart problems. Less foraging desire. Less flavor. Cornish X
Barred Silvers, Rainbows, etc. • Advantages • Better foragers • Fewer health problems • More texture to meat • Better flavor • Disadvantages • Grow out in about 12 weeks • Higher feed costs • Smaller breasts • More texture to meat
Equipment for Alternative Production • Brooders • Home until sufficiently feathered • Most critical stage of growth • First weeks determine long term survival & development • Be prepared to check your chicks at least twice per day. Pay attention to details! • Made of many different materials • Basic brooder holds as many as 250 chicks can cost as little as $100 to construct
Brooder Requirements • Space • 1 square foot per bird • Heat Sources • 2 light bulbs • 95o F for week 1 – then decrease 5o F per week. (need thermostat) • Litter • 3 inches of clean dry litter ( No sawdust or cedar ) • Avoid slippery surfaces like newspaper • Keep litter around water and feed dry and clean
Brooder Requirements • Water • 1 quart for every 25 birds (clean and fill daily) • For large number automatic watering systems work best • Feeders • Place near heat, but not directly underneath source • Fresh food in front of chicks at all times • Delivery Day • Brooder should be up and running 24 hr before chicks arrive • Have them sent overnight • Show each bird water source
Pasture Housing • Protect from rain and cold when first on pasture. • After about four weeks, chickens can tolerate cold or rain, but not at same time. • Need to provide shade. Broilers can not take extreme heat. • 3 weeks in brooder • 7 weeks in pasture
Pastured Poultry Systems • The Salatin System • 80-100 birds per pen • Lightweight, bottomless 12’ x 10’ x 2’ (LWH) pen moved one pen length onto fresh grass everyday. • 1/3 to ½ of the pen has a flat sheet metal roof • Most common water system is gravity fed bell waterer • Cost = $130 (Lowe’s)
The Salatin System • Advantages • Low cost unit • Prevents build up of manure • Grass cover is not destroyed • Poultry protected from flying predators • Disadvantages • Pens need to be moved everyday • Nighttime predators • Hard to reach in pen to get birds • May not be enough shade during hot periods
Day Range Systems • Poultry house on skids ( 8’ x 18’ ) moved to field at beginning of growing period • Bird on pasture during day and shut in house at night. • Moved on weekly basis • Pasture activity controlled by electrified netting. • 400 birds per acre • Cost is variable • 160’ electronet poultry fence = $160 • Electrical source = variable • Poultry house = ~ $400
Day Range Systems • Advantages • Better protection from nighttime predators • Provides non-wet grounds and protection from rain • Easy to catch birds • Disadvantages • More expensive • Exposed to flying predators • House needs to be cleaned in between batches • Care of birds is required in AM and PM • Grass can be damaged if fence not moved often
Chicken Tractors • Bottomless, portable shelter-pen that fits over garden beds • Many designs • Mostly commonly used with fruit and vegetable production • Popular among sustainable production enthusiasts
Chicken Tractor • Advantages • Can be moved very easily • Insect control • Source of fertilizer • Used in urban areas • Disadvantages • Ground can become barren • Semi-labor intensive • Not made for a large amount of poultry
Feeders • Hanging System • Raise and lower to bird height • Outer lip level with birds back • Prevents spillage and spoilage • Trough Feeder Systems • Chickens more susceptible to disease • Taken out of pen before moving • More chickens can feed at once
Watering Systems • Five-gallon bucket atop the pen will gravity feed a bell waterer • Mesh screen across top • Attach to pen • Hoses can be used on nipple waterers • Daily water consumption at 90o F • Chickens…8.4 gallons • Turkeys…..120 gallons • Water intake varies greatly
Predator Control • Type of control depends on system • Salatin and tractor = nocturnal predators • Place pens well inside pastures instead of along wooded fence lines. Predators reluctant to travel across open territory. • Dogs, traps, motion lights, bungee cords • Free Range = flying predators • Have as little tree cover as possible. Poultry have a sixth sense in open air.
Disease Control • Disease rarely reported in pastured poultry systems • 10% mortality is normal • Most common loss due to getting wet in rainstorms • Parasites not a problem because of grass rotation • Poultry disease flow charts in production section
Processing Equipment • Kill Cones • Scalder • Plucker • Stainless steel table • Running water • Plastic tubs • Sharp knives • Ice • Bags
The Business of Pastured Poultry • Labor • 80 hours to build one pen, raise, process and market 100 birds • Average 20 hours a week • Costs • Feed is 2/3 of production costs Income • Typically, producer nets 50% of sale price • Chickens $1.75 per pound @ 3.5 pounds • Turkeys $3.00 per pound @18 pounds
Questions References • Free Range Poultry Production and Marketing: A Guide to Raising, Processing, and Marketing Premium Quality Chicken and Turkey and Eggs, by Herman Beck Chenoweth • Success with Baby Chicks, by Robert Plamadon • The Chicken Health Handbook, by Gail Demerow • Grit!, bimonthly newsletter published by American Pastured Poultry Producers Association (APPPA) • The Dollar Hen: The Classic Guide to American Free-Range Egg Farming, by M. Hastings and Robert Plamondon • Profitable Poultry: Raising Birds on Pasture by Sustainable Agriculture Network • Pastured Poultry Research by Truman State University