How Much Feed Does It Take to Raise a Pound of Beef
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How much does it cost to raise a meat chicken?
- Thread starter ChickenJill
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I would say the best way to figure out how much it would cost you is to do a little homework. Decide how many you want to do and price that quantity of chicks. Figure out your feed options and price accordingly in your area. If you going to raise them up to 7 or 8 weeks of age, figure between 15-18 pounds of feed per bird. Doing this will get you pretty close.
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- #3
- #4
Females will weigh 4 to 4 1/2 pounds(sometimes there will be a 5 pounder) and males should be 4-6 pounds. Not sure if it's just me, but the males seem to vary in size more so than the females. When we process a straight run batch of 50 at 8 weeks, the average is usually around 4 1/2 pounds, give or take a little. My average cost is typically around $5 with how I do things.
Something I didn't touch on before is processing. We do our own, and in doing that, we save (or make) $2 each. If you not going to do your own, find somewhere that will and add that cost to the total as well.
- #5
Switching to bulk feed and if processing DIY the cost for me is about half that.
- #6
- #7
But you can't compare them to supermarket chickens. They are not the same. If you are price shopping, they compare to the specialty free range chickens, which I think you will find are rather expense to buy.
If cost is the only consideration, then buy from the market. If quality matters, raise your own. It's not cheap to do, especially since all the expenses are concentrated into 2 months. That's a lot of cash for feed all at one time.
- #8
This question about cost of raising your own vs. cost of birds at the supermarket comes up all the time here. Lots has been written on the subject, and I've mostly tuned out on it. But the previous post captures my thoughts on the subject better than I could say it myself. If you are able to get your meat birds on some pasture, and let them move around and chase bugs and scratch at the dirt, the finished product will be fundamentally different than the rubber chicken from the store. Because home-raised and supermarket birds are such different meats, in terms of taste and quality, comparing the costs of the two is an exercise in comparing apples to oranges.
- #9
Some people say there isn't a difference in pasture or commercial chicken, just price. I don't know anyone who can't see the difference in browning ground beef. One is sitting in a pool of fat & the pan next to it that is fat free. Ground beef is a much easier analogy for me!
- #10
We butchered 31 broilers today at 7 1/2 weeks old. Our results were outstanding. I ordered 30 straight run jumbo broilers from Sunnyside and received 31. I allowed for 15 lbs of feed per bird ordered and bought 150 lbs of 22% organic corn/soy ration to start and 300 lbs of 20% organic corn/soy to finish. The birds dressed out at an average of 5.5 lbs per bird with neck. The largest were 8 lbs, the smaller ones just under 5 lbs, with one runt at 3 lbs.
It was 168 lbs of dressed birds, working backwards I figure 240 lbs of live weight (using .70, since I left the neck attached). That gives me an FCR of 1.88:1. WOW.
I'm not sure why folks complain about the cost. My numbers:
450 lbs of ORGANIC feed: $153.96
Chicks: $34.70
Shavings for brooder: $6.00
Electricity (est.) $15.00
Propane for scalding: $5.00
Shrink bags for 31: $11.00
Total $226 or $1.35 / lb
That's $1.35 / lb feeding certified organic feed...
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