patandchickens
Crazy Cat Lady
I know this has been hashed to death on BYC but it always seems to benefit from further go-rounds with new participants, plus this is the first time I can really participate (we are eating our 1st homegrown cockerel tonight for dinner) AND most of all I just can't think of any other better more relevant topics to start
Soooooo....
I will propose that it actually CAN be cheaper, or at least as cheap, to eat yer own chicken as something bought in the store (and I'm not talking fancy organic free-range, I'm talking regular grocery store chicken).
I figure the 15 wk old chantecler cockerel that is currently in the oven comes out to be almost exactly the same price as run-of-the-mill grocery store chicken around here (about $6.59 per kilo - I dunno what that is per pound and the kids walked off with my calculator, a kilo is 2.25 lbs, you do the math ). Possibly a *little* more expensive since he may have less meat for the same weight of carcass, but not really very different.
That's $3.00 for the chick, plus I am estimating about $4 worth of feed to get him to this point. Dressed carcass weight was exactly 1 kg, funnily enough. (Actually, that's skinless weight -- I have no idea how much extra to guesstimate to compare him to a skin-on supermarket carcass, so I choose to ignore the whole issue <g>) There was no processing cost (axe out back, followed by cuttingboard and bucket), and I'm not including the cost of converting the kennel to chickens b/c I prefer to consider that as hobby-related 'capital improvements to the property as a whole'
If we had hatched him from our own egg, as we will likely be doing next spring with the sussexes, it would actually beat the cost of grocery store chicken. As long as you do the capital-improvements accounting trick, anyhow.
There, now y'all can argue with me or share your own experiences/calculations
Pat
Soooooo....
I will propose that it actually CAN be cheaper, or at least as cheap, to eat yer own chicken as something bought in the store (and I'm not talking fancy organic free-range, I'm talking regular grocery store chicken).
I figure the 15 wk old chantecler cockerel that is currently in the oven comes out to be almost exactly the same price as run-of-the-mill grocery store chicken around here (about $6.59 per kilo - I dunno what that is per pound and the kids walked off with my calculator, a kilo is 2.25 lbs, you do the math ). Possibly a *little* more expensive since he may have less meat for the same weight of carcass, but not really very different.
That's $3.00 for the chick, plus I am estimating about $4 worth of feed to get him to this point. Dressed carcass weight was exactly 1 kg, funnily enough. (Actually, that's skinless weight -- I have no idea how much extra to guesstimate to compare him to a skin-on supermarket carcass, so I choose to ignore the whole issue <g>) There was no processing cost (axe out back, followed by cuttingboard and bucket), and I'm not including the cost of converting the kennel to chickens b/c I prefer to consider that as hobby-related 'capital improvements to the property as a whole'
If we had hatched him from our own egg, as we will likely be doing next spring with the sussexes, it would actually beat the cost of grocery store chicken. As long as you do the capital-improvements accounting trick, anyhow.
There, now y'all can argue with me or share your own experiences/calculations
Pat