$4.44 Difference Raising Cornish Cross VS Red Ranger Chickens
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- čas přidán 2. 05. 2018
- Shedding light on the chicken breed debate. Cornish cross VS red ranger. Raising chickens for meat by the numbers.
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NOTES:
To help off set your costs of heritage breeds I sold the feathers to several fishing shops for fly tying. Of course another difference was I raised 800 chickens for personal consumption per year (a lot was turned to burger and sausage ). The last year I did it we sold a lot of the birds at farmers market... they were skinned and cut up. My customers liked the flavor and I only had 1 customer complain about no skin.... these are just a few thoughts. I ultimately sold the homestead to care for my mother until she passed. One day I will buy another homestead here in michigan. .. good luck. ..God bless you. ...curt
I hope you find another while you still can. The real estate market is crazy
Did you ever find any other homestead?
You sound like you really knew what you were doing and enjoyed it hope you find another Homestead
I have 2 rules for work. 1. It must be fun. 2. I earn $50 per hour.
I keep very accurate records.
My Cornish Cross hens and roosters average 7.5 pounds dressed rate at 8 weeks.
I have raised chickens, ducks, pheasants, and turkeys for 33 years.
In 33 years I have not lost one bird to a predator.
What are your strategies to protect from predators?
@@SarahPerine We have one simple strategy - a few strands of very hot electric fence around the base perimeter of the building and run area. The same is in place on insulators in the open eve area where soffit would normally be placed.
There pretty safe in tractors
Crazy how much feed has gone up since you made this video. Thx for all the great info👍🏽
I just found your channel today and I have to say I'm loving all the "here's the numbers" videos. I love that nitty gritty nerdy numbers aspect of this and these videos are so helpful.
Excellent video and content! Thanks for sharing the numbers. Those numbers are very different for us. We get an average 4 lbs out of the Cornish Cross in a mere 6 to 6.5 wks. Our red rangers yield more like 6.5 to 7 lbs at 12 wks. We also don’t buy feed in 50 lbs bags as that’s an expensive way to go. As for dual purpose, we raise them until week 16 and sell them live for $25 each as laying hens thereby cutting the processing and inventory cost.
May I suggest True Blues or True Greens? The roos are raised for the feathers for fly fishing.
Thank you for this! As someone who plans on starting a small farm when I move, this information is so appreciated.
Your videos are always very helpful and educational. Thanks to you i have 20 Cornish cross going from the brooder into one of your chicken tractors next week!
Wow. This video is Outstanding! Subscribed... I've been neglecting other things as I'm binge-watching your videos all day. You provide great detail and are also in the same zone of the US as I am [and are looking to settle down in]. Very happy I found this content.
John thank u 4 this video man u break it down 2 where someone has simple minded as me can UNDERSTAND love ya bro keep up the awesome work and videos u r ALOT OF HELP bc I'm starting a homestead/farm
Enjoyed watching you crunch the numbers. I’m having the same discussion with myself. This year I used my dual purpose eggs and incubated my chicks for pasture raising. That saved on hatchery expense and I got really heathy chicks with low mortality and got a 3.5 carcass at 12 weeks. I did this for my own freezer. But I can see the CX would be more marketable if I wanted to bring in cash.
John thank you for the video. I appreciate the fact that you went into depth about cost as a whole. I don't raise for production but for therapy and normally I enjoy a longer-lived bird. What you showed me is that a mixed flock will provide me with all the benefits and (costs) but also allow me to cull for what meal I am making. thank you again very informative video.
Real nice video, gives me a lot to think about before my trip down chicken lane!
In my part of the Europe the Dual Purpose or our versions of these breeds are preferred meat for a traditional chicken soup and some other dishes and since they are seldom farmed commercially you have to know someone who knows someone and pay premium (they are sometimes pricier than beef because the usual form of payment for these is a bottle of alcohol... and to be clear it is not the bottom shelf kind of alcohol).
Thanks for making these videos man!
Cory Snyder czcams.com/video/fxOVSr9Zr54/video.html
Really appreciating your videos! This one is has great $$ information! I've raised all three types (just for our family) but never did the numbers. Something I've learned...a tip for those going with the Cornish but wanting better forage activity from them... include a few instinctive dual purpose birds that encourage, by example, them to eat more greens on pasture. I stick with the Cornish cross (yes indeed the highest and most tender meat producer) and the dual purpose Chanteclair breed. Living in Canada, I've discovered them to be the best laying bird to deal with the cold and the roosters dress a descent weight in the fall.
Excellent I see so many people coming up short without ever looking at the math in a reasonable way. Many discount the labor as sunk costs but people forget they have a life. I have neighbors that said "if you count the labor you will never make nuthin'." Thanks for this very enlightening.
Great presentation John, your numbers were spot on.
Very Helpful Video as I am currently considering options.
Nice Video buddy. We appreciate a concise assessment of the facts. An interesting experiment would be to compare cc's in a tractor and cc's in a coop on feed.
THANK YOU so much for this! I really want to raise Red Rangers, and knowing that the cost difference is less than a latte, I'm all in! THANKS SO MUCH!!!
Loved this breakdown man!
I found this video to be very thought provoking. Thank you for the information, thanks for posting. A very good presentation form.
Excellent demonstration and analysis!
This is our first year raising cc. We haven't lost one bird. Really, our next go around we'll be processing sooner than 8 weeks. We have a large family but these guys get huge.
ANOTHER GREAT BREAKDOWN...Now can we get a course on the brewery???Would love to see facts and figures on how it plays a role on the farm income..
Thanks for putting this together.
Just found you! Love it that you feed them organic feed!!!
Dig the blues, very relevant issue and delivery! Concise to the max. Well done.
Very well thought out! Very good presentation, better concepts than the sales/marketing funnel! But I'm a numbers guy! They don't lie, the people cooking them lie! Not the chickens, the numbers! I really enjoy your enthusiasm for the topic, I'm glad you are too! Looks like The Friday before memorial day will be my next KF brew tasting. .. you are open Fridays?
Do you soak your grain? Justin Rhodes said he cut his feed cost quite a bit by soaking his grain.
Great job John!!!
John,
When do the farm tours open. How can I see when they are?
These are great. I’m going to raise some ducks this year. I want to try to get this much good data. Unreal inspiring, dude.
This is a gold mine / time capsule of a comment. Not only did you do ducks but you have done a tone more. Great job!
Awesome breakdown. One thing to note is that not only does faster = for profit per bird, but overall profitability goes up the more birds one can raise in a single year. The longer they take to grow, the more time and space they take from the next run.
Assuming one has all 52 weeks of the year, that means raising six (and a half) runs of CXs, a little over four runs of RRs. and just barely more than three runs of DPs.
Even assuming you have the market for a %100 markup on all breeds (maybe more, at approx. $5 per pound on the CXs) your annual profits might be:
CXs - $54.42 times birds per run
RRs - $54.04 times birds per run
DPs - $43.45 times birds per run
that puts RRs much closer to CXs, but multiplied over 240+ birds each run, it's still a BIG difference.
Thanks for the food for thought, maybe one day I may turn this into real food😁.
I'm getting a meat breed called Robust whites from Moyer's chicks in PA. They are suppose to do well on pasture and grow at a rate somewhere between a Cornish X and Red Ranger. I plan to process at 10 weeks.
Elle Mietitore cool. I’d like to hear how it works out. Some of the most successful breeds start as a hybrid.
You'll do well with these. Expect numbers closer to cornish x than red ranger, all things equal.
How did you do with those birds? Curious to know. Thx
We raised 100 each of the C. Cross and Rangers. We had a plus 47 cents per pound gross additional cost Ranger vs. C. Cross. We are sticking to C. Cross from here on. . . Pasture raised birds. Supplemented with our own hand mixed feed. . .
Good info and well presented.
Your base labor cost is off on the Duel Purpose because they can free range once established home base ( I would venture to say the same for Red Rangers)....labor for them is about 15 minutes max a day because they free range vs tractors...that's letting them out...putting them to bed, tossing scraps, changing nest box litter, observing, changing feeders - I always enjoy your videos - thanks! :)
I expect his costs are for what he actually DOES. He may have high predator numbers in his area, and has probably already tried this method. I know I would!
For people who are raising their birds for food and not for sale I can't recommend red rangers enough. We have a vegetable farm and raise eggs on pasture for our CSA program. Last year we raised a small batch cornish cross for ourselves and are raising rangers this year and will never go back. In my opinion they look and act like a chicken should, and in my context it's well worth it.
Excellent walk through. It would be hard to raise heritage birds for a profit but I’m just starting to work towards that. My plan is to use them in the gardens for the 16-18 weeks so I get them to work for me. For you there’s no question on what you can raise being a big farmer. I gotta say if anyone got at you for raising the Cornish cross you definitely raise them the way they should be. Oh yea I’m still working for 100 chickens this year. I’ve hatched 10 with 22 more in the incubator.
Brian Philbrook , he left out the most important part of raising a duel purpose breed is you won't make anything on them till they have layed a few dozen eggs. Every $4 dozen you sell comes off of the price it cost to raise them. There's not much difference eating a 16 week bird or a 30 week bird other than more meat and flavor.
Interesting seeing the numbers.
I'm working on a duel propose breed. At the moment I'm raising some Dark Cornish/ Rode Island Red crosses just to see how they grow out and their egg production levels. Otherwise I'll go for a standard duel propose breed.
95% of my reason for raising birds is for the eggs. But recently, now that I built my second coop. I want to raise birds for their meat. BUT I do not want to have to buy new chicks every time. So I would like to keep the best rooster and 3 or 4 of the best hens (Fastest growing/egg production) to pass their genetics to the next batch.
Goals are to have a 5 pound (dressed) bird in 14 weeks or less.
I may keep my Dark Cornish rooster. He's already 2 years old, a bit smaller than the RIR hens but built like a bulldog, he's dense and far heavier than he looks. He's also very docile and I would like to keep those traits in my future roosters.
The only down side is that it's illegal to Free range in my area and I live in the desert anyway so there is very little to forage for. so 100% of their feed would have to be bought.
Your videos are super cool. What it taught me most of all is that it's extremely expensive to raise organic cornish birds. You sure know your chickens. I don't care if my cornish birds don't forage, they def don't. But you teach a new aspect to all of that pasture business. Thumbs up to cornish birds! They are also very tame and easy to manage!
Thanks for sharing those numbers. For me, taste is more important as this is for everyone on our ranch. But it's good to know. We do have laying hens specifically for their high production.
thank you for providing detailed knowledge this is very useful
thanks for the info! perhaps someone who really wants to do heritage chickens and couple it with egg production might do okay?
Thanks bro !!
Great video !!
Nice analysis
Great work!
I would like to see his broiler processing video. Has anyone seen it? I can’t find it.
good presentation, thanks
John, do you have a video that has plans for showing us how to make the Chicken Tractor Houses you have the chickens pictured in at the very start of this video? (22 second mark). I love this design of pulling a tractor this big with a rope. Of if not, do you know where I might go to learn how to make this?
I think, and I might be a Lil confused, but, Cornish cross are higher priced per bird than red rangers, I checked on a few different breeders and the prices vary, yes but, not by much. Also not all websites provide the same kind of birds, that been said, I'm giving you an example of prices that I personally pay for my meat birds, Cornish cross (ordering 250 birds on one shipment) is $1.95 per bird, and on red rangers (same quantity) is $1.15 per bird, that is a difference of $0.80 per bird times 250 bird = $200, that been said, yes the Cornish cross grow faster than red rangers, but at the end with the money you saved per bird end up been either the same or pretty close. Good luck and me and my wife love watching your videos
Just started with the American Bresse and am liking them a lot. Still raise Cornish Cross for meat here but have cut down on the number we will consume. Looking forward to trying the American Bresse to compare flavor our selves....
Great video. One other thing yo remember, if you are raising for profit. in a six month raising season you can raise 4 batches of c cross as opposed to only 3 rangers or 2 dual purpose.
Great info!
What would be interesting to see is the Feed\Labor cost with the animal loss figured in say in a batch of 100 birds vs per bird basis since cornish cross mortality is a factor. I don't know what those numbers would look like, but if I started between cornishX and red rangers, and lost no RR, but lost 10% of the CornishX at say the midpoint process, what then becomes the price difference? I'm not even sure what the average "high" mortality rate would be to figure this out
Is worming necessary?
If so, how, when and what products do you use?
How do I get a copy of the pastured poultry packet #1?
We're can I buy your book ??? We love your channel
I only wish I had seen this about 4 years ago. I had never raised birds strictly for meat. We had always raised standard breeds and dressed off the previous year's hens for meat. Some friends asked me to raise some chickens for them for meat. I agreed to do it at cost simply as an experiment. All I tracked was feed and processing cost. I didn't factor in labor or materials or any other things. I didn't even use organic/non-gmo feed. I raised a batch of 25 standard breed roosters. And it was HORRIBLE. I was using hoop coop chicken tractors that were way over built and tough to move. Consequently, they didn't get moved as often as they should and my pasture really has never recovered. My feed costs were astronomical. At the end of the summer, I was embarrassed to give them the bill. It was a MAJOR fail and I gave up on raising strictly meat birds until this year. This year I am trying the Cornish X and so far, have been FAR happier with them. Can't wait to see how they taste!!
Hi John, very good video, thks !
as meat quality is better for DP breed and red rangers, wouldn't you sell the birds at higher price ? wich would balance the labour and feed cost
Regards from France
Valentin
10/10. Fantastic video. Great job. And thank you.
hi john. I'm new to the channel and have a question. how old were you when you decided to farm fulltime?
What is the cost per chick? How many of the 240 originals will you have at processing (genetics)? How much feed do the "real" chickens eat vs forage? What percentage rate would you use for accidental (weather/predator ect.) death? How many batches can you run each year for the different types?
You are an amazing guy your family should be very proud of you
!!!
Great commentary of rational used to make your decision. I’m just starting out and will probably follow your lead
Thanks for the compliment Ken. I’m happy to help and lend what perspective I can.
Great video. I raise chickens. And never broke things down. Normally I do my chickens I hatch out and process my roosters . But it's expensive
John i am 11 and mw and my friend want to stat are own chicken farm
Cole Piercey skies the limit brother
jsheridan02 thanks
I'd wait till you're at least 12.
Good on you buddy. Do your research, and here is a good place to start. Start small and with your parents permission. You will learn a lot even with just a couple of hens. Good luck! Everybody starts somewhere.🤜🏽🤛🏽
Do it
Whats the sale price per pound of free range cornish cross?
Which chicken have the best wings like jumbo wings. Also where do you get chicken ffeed cheapest
Muchas gracias grandiosa información
So a dual purpose would be good for egg laying and then later a meat bird?
Excellent video
How much do you mark-up your birds for profit, 20% - 30%?
Nice video. I heard about you from Red Tool House.
We've raised Cornish X and the leg problems and mortality rate are the biggest problem on pasture. They're just unable to walk very well, especially when they get older. So we switched to Cornish Roasters for a couple of years now and they are outstanding. They take about 9-11 weeks to get to the 4lb size but if you let them go to a full 12 weeks, they can be 6-8lbs. Way bigger return than Red Rangers. The males are especially big. They forage well and have no leg issues, low mortality rate. I think they are a good compromise between the efficiency of Cornish X and the pasture suitability of Red Ranger.
Hi jhon are the freedom rangers sasso breeds??
PERFECT! Thank you!
Man I am inspired by your video awesome thanks I watched three times
Thanks for watching and I hope you picked up some good info. Doing my best to help others.
Is that 8 weeks after they leave the brooder and get put on pasture, or is that from chick to processing?
The cost of loss ( high mortality with Cornish cross) should definitely factor into cost per bird.
If you lose 25% of your Cornish but 0% of your Rangers, that makes a huge difference.
Exactly what I was going to add!
Where do you purchase your birds?
Thanks
I realize you made this video a while ago but I have a question. If the Rangers can have a 0% mortality rate and the cornish cross die both in the brooder and also when on pasture, how many of them are dying later in life? I am wondering if the cost of the dead birds and the labor/feed invested in those dead birds can help off set the additional cost of the Rangers, given that you arent likely to have a loss of investment along the way since they live? Does that make sense? Do you answer that somewhere already and I missed it?
What about the cost in ordering CX chicks from hatchery... Heritage would be more desirable if you consider that cost, right?
One other thought, do you ever use mortality rate as a factor for profitability? A 5% vs 1% would matter if you’re doing big numbers.
Very informative , if you will add of the cost of day old chicks, its make more plateable. Its really a nice work. Thanks
Excellent comparison video especially for people just starting out or for those that are interested in raising their own chickens in the future. Appreciate you sharing this information as I've noticed other channels attempting to promote the Rangers by knocking Cornish Crosses. If a hatchery (selling Rangers) sent my family free Rangers I may say something nice on my channel too! I may even convince or scare my children or grandchildren that the "monster/Frankenstein" bird on the other plate is not as nice tasting as this healthy scrawny bird on their plate. We raise Cornish Crosses for our family's consumption and will continue to do so for all the reasons you've indicated. Out of that 4lbs on the X's the weight is mostly thick white breast meat and we like that! Another plus is: in two months we've raised our chicken meat for the year. If one wants chicken tender size breast meat then by all means go for Rangers.
So how much do you sell a cornish cross 4lb bird for ??
You are dead WRONG about the Cornish Cross being poor foragers. I just raised 3 I bought from Rural King. And they got 85% of their feed from foraging. I let them go 10 weeks and they finished at 9-9.5lbs dressed. So I do not know what you are doing wrong, but a 4lb bird is unacceptable. And my birds were healthy, great bright white coat of feathers. They could run, and they did not have any problems with being heavy. Though they would sit on occasion to eat, but I did notice they did rest more. And my birds are free range. And my 2 year old hens, one Silkie and some other random hen lay 320 eggs a year easy.
So my best guess is, whatever you are feeding them is no good. And half of the feed they got was cracked corn, the rest was just scratch grains.
EDIT: I just calculated the actual feed I used to get them up to weight in 10 weeks. And I used 1.85 lbs of feed per pound of growth.
WE free range our cc, and they do wonderful, and get about the same size as a small turkey, i dont want a four pound chicken, living traditions just did a comparison also, i think the cc won also
You grew a chicken 9.5lbs in 10weeks?
Would I need any health license or certificate or business license to start raising meat chickens for sale ?
Please explain market rates compare
The final cost on the heritage breeds should have included a deduction for the value of the eggs. My guess is they would end up at least comparable to the rangers, or possibly even better depending on which breed.
How's the new house working out?
Which taste the best, worth more?
One thing I didn't see in the costs was the initial purchase cost of the chicks which can be $2.50-$4 per bird depending on the breed, quantity etc. With Cornish Cross you will always have this expense.for many heritage breeds you will have that initial cost, however, you may wish to keep a rooster or two so you have fertile eggs which can be hatched by broody hens or in a small incubator which would mean the costs would decrease on future years for any heritage breed.
Update this video it would be interesting to see what labor feed and chick cost would be.
has anyone bought any of the books? I feel the books are WAY over priced, if you have bought a book is it worth $40-$77 for digital download??
Great video. Like your new updated format( not saying I didn’t like it before). Interested in hearing debate about raising the different meat birds. My experience with s much smaller group of meat chickens (25) is right on track with your experience. I just go with the Cornish cross and they do very well on pasture for me. Just have to provide shade for them in the summers hotter days.
Great video...with the mortality rate of Cornish cross...what is the true cost divided among the birds that make it to market? It will raise the overall cost of the project per bird. Do you have any numbers?
5-8% mortality, so roughly $0.50 per surviving bird. Might be less if the mortality is early (less feed wasted)