Submissions     Contact     Advertise     Donate     BlogRoll     Subscribe                         

Wednesday, July 16, 2025

Meat Chickens: What You Need to Know

Meat Chickens: What You Need to Know

Have you decided that you’d like to raise chickens for meat? While it’s not for everyone, it may be something you’re willing to do, especially if it means providing food for your family to enjoy. Not only can you raise meat chickens to provide meat for the family at home instead of buying it at the local grocery store, but you may also want to raise meat chickens to sell them for profit.

Before you start raising these chickens and providing them with everything they need, there are some essential things to know in advance to help you have the most success possible. As you know, I have not raised chickens, but I’m learning right along with you. We must raise as much meat as we can and grow our own food in a garden.

“Prepare Your Family For Survival” by Linda Loosli

Meat Chickens: What You Need to Know

Meat Chickens: What You Need to Know

Choose the Right Chickens

If you’re going to raise meat chickens, it helps to know which ones are best to have on your land for that purpose. If you buy small chickens that never get large enough, you may not make a lot back on the investment that you’re initially getting into when purchasing these chickens.

So, be sure to check out which breeds are best suited for meat production purposes. Some of the chickens that are good to have when you’re planning to sell them or kill them yourself for the meat include Jersey Giants, Cornish Cross, and Buckeyes. Several others are ideal for this purpose, too, so it’s a matter of preference when it comes down to it.

Jersey Giants

  • They weigh about 13 pounds.
  • Processing time is about 16-21 weeks.
  • They grow rather slowly.
  • They are purebreds, so you can breed them yourself.
  • They lay a fair number of eggs as well.
  • Not prone to health issues, which is critical.
  • Produce a lot of meat.
Jersey Giants

Cornish Cross

  • They weigh about 12 pounds.
  • Ready to process at 4-6 weeks.
  • They grow very fast and will weigh 12 pounds in 6 weeks, possibly less.
  • You must purchase these annually (they can’t be bred in an incubator).
  • They are known for their breast meat.
  • This is the most popular chicken breed found in packages at grocery stores.
Cornish Cross Meat Chickens

Buckeyes

  • Approximate weight of 9 pounds.
  • Processing time is about 16-21 weeks.
  • Resistant to disease.
  • Can be somewhat aggressive to other animals.
  • Great for dual purpose, laying eggs and delicious tasting meat.
  • They lay about 200 eggs per year.
  • Ready for butchering at 16 weeks of age, in most cases.
  • Beautiful mahogany red feathers.
  • Tolerant of cold-weather locations.
Buckeye Meat Chickens

Know What to Feed Your Chickens

Be sure to provide your chickens with the right amount of food throughout the week to help them grow and become even more productive. After all, a larger chicken is ideal when you’re using it for meat because then you will end up with more meat when it comes time to process them.

Also, provide the chickens with protein grower feed. The feed will help them increase in size within a short period. The growth of your chickens will also depend on the breed you’ve decided to raise on your land.

Of course, when you’re choosing the breed, you’ll want to select a good size, but you may also prefer finding chickens with decent temperaments. Not everyone wants to deal with aggressive chickens that are hard to manage.

Decide How Many Chickens You Want

Consider the number of chickens that you’d like to have live on your land. It will depend a lot on the amount of space you have available and the number of other animals that live on the land with you and your family.

When raising meat chickens for consumption and sale, it’s essential to have as many as your property can support, as this maximizes the return on your financial and time investment. Having a handful of chickens won’t suffice because they’ll reach maturity simultaneously and get butchered, leaving you with nothing left, unless you continually replace them.

When buying your meat chickens, you may want to consider purchasing different ones at varying ages so that you’ll always have some chickens to care for during each growing season.

Choose the Right Time to Butcher Them

Some people don’t know when it’s the best time to butcher the chickens to get the freshest and most flavorful meat. While it may seem early to some, the best time for butchering chickens is around the 12-week mark.

At this point, the chickens are roughly three months old and have likely tripled or quadrupled in size since hatching from the eggs. If you butcher at this point, the chicken will taste fresh, moist, and delicious.

However, if you wait too long, the meat may not be as tender, possibly making it less desirable when preparing it. Age could also impact the sales price.

Keep Conditions Clean and Comfortable

While you may have plans to butcher these chickens after they reach a certain age, that doesn’t mean you should skimp on the quality of their living quarters. Be sure to provide your chickens with enough space to roam freely without spending their short lives huddled on top of one another.

Some people keep too many chickens in one spot, creating unsanitary conditions that could potentially cause harm to the chickens and make their meat less desirable. If that’s the case, you could lose money instead of making a profit, which would make the process of raising meat chickens pointless.

Provide plenty of space for your chickens to roam around and live their best lives for the time that they’re alive. Ensure they receive sufficient food to support their growth and water to stay properly hydrated.

You might even want to set up some toys and other items for the chickens to keep them occupied and busy while they’re living on your land. Of course, it’s entirely up to you to decide what you’d like to do with your chickens, but this is an option that many people like!

Find a Butcher

Although you’re raising the chickens, you might not want to do the butchering yourself, and that is perfectly fine! Plenty of people raise these chickens on their land and then send them off to get butchered elsewhere, where they won’t have to see it happening or be involved at any level.

Instead, try to find the best butcher who will take great pride in cutting the meat of the chickens you’ve raised to provide you with excellent options for eating or selling.

When you’re working side by side with a good butcher, you can expect to make more of a profit from your meat chickens than you would with someone who isn’t as professional.

Raising Quail: What You Need to Know

Egg Chickens: What You Need to Know

Meat Rabbits: Tips for Raising Them

Final Word 

You can successfully raise meat chickens on your land, even if you don’t have much experience with what it takes. It all starts with figuring out which chickens you’d like to buy and bring on your land. It’s a good idea to choose a larger breed that isn’t too hard to handle, making it a lot easier for you to raise these animals without a struggle.

Once you have the chickens on your land and they reach maturity, you can have them sent to be butchered and then keep the meat or sell it to others, depending on your preference. Some people will save half the meat and sell the other half because they can use that profit to buy more chickens. If you have personal experience raising meat chickens, please share some of your ideas to help my readers achieve the greatest success possible. May God bless this world, Linda

Copyright Images: Jersey Giant Chickens AdobeStock_262626888 by Peter, Cornish Cross Meat Chickens AdobeStock_372480068 by Hannah May, Buckeye Chicken AdobeStock_446989169 by Cavan, Chickens Free Range Depositphotos_41515931_s-2019

The post Meat Chickens: What You Need to Know appeared first on Food Storage Moms.



from Food Storage Moms

No comments:

Post a Comment