CT native here. But living in the opposite north corner. Have always done egg layers, after watching this and sharing it with my family, we are considering building one chicken tractor and trying it out. Would love to come see your farm sometime, right now I work on a farm in Mansfield. Anyways, I really appreciate you taking the time to make this series, and the passion you put into it. Thank you so much!
I know I am late to the party but I just binge watched these 8 videos. By far the best pastured poultry series on UA-cam. I'm going too be purchasing your packet for sure, nice work John you do an excellent job.
That's way cool to hear Luke. I am glad you liked the series. I have been working to collect all my resources, put out a ton of free content, and grow the community of people wanting to farm. Glad to hear some of it is working, haha.
John, I want to thank you for this series. I really appreciate all the time you've put into educating your followers. I ordered your book yesterday (from Amazon) and I'm excited for it to arrive. You're an inspiration to not only me but my family as well. God Bless you AND your family and business!!! Thanks Again!!
Wow, John, you are amazing! What a wealth of information I've received from watching your week-by-week series. I feel like I've had an internship or a course at the local college, no kidding. I bought your book and it is very well done. Many thanks for all the time and effort you've put into these videos to share with us!
I recently came across your videos, pure awesomeness!!! I thought I ordered 15 birds, but ended up with 26 broilers because the other people decided against it... Lots of scrambling to make space, get feeders, etc.! Lol!! I have been binge watching your vids, and they are fantastic! I have several doctors who want to buy my home grown birds, but I can't sell them cut up due to regs in my state. I can, however, sell them live, 😊. Thank you for all your help and passion!
John, great series. I have purchased your book on Amazon and will implement your system next year on our farm. We have already implemented your pastured egg system this year and it is working great! Looking forward to the pastured pig series.
Love the videos. I'm moving to New Milford soon and will one day start a small flock for my home birds. Would love to drive to kent one day and pick your brain and see your layout and everything.
Thanks for making and uploading this series. Very easy to listen to from a Englishman as you don’t speak proper English 🤣 but a great series well done , enjoyed it a whole lot
I wish I were closer to buy your product. The passion, joy and care must find its way into those broilers, and they must be delicious. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and enthusiasm.
A few tips from 25 years of growing and selling chickens, If your a homesteader the best way to save freezer space and time if you are processing your own, is to cut them in half and stack them in the freezer. If you are selling your birds and home processing, be sure to check with your state laws. Some states will not let you sell anything but a whole bird. And some have a limit as to how many you can sell from the from. Example: in my home state of Vermont, I can only sell 999 birds off the farm before i need to pay an inspected processor or build a massive facility and hire my own state inspector. Each state has there own set of laws regarding poultry.
In your Broiler Video Course...are you going to be discussing seasonal raising of Broilers? I'm near Chicago Illinois...so obviously can't do it all year...but would be more interested in the video course if it goes into detail on that aspect as well.
YES Julee!!! Chickens are great. There's so much to learn and experience and enjoy. You're going to love it. Keep in touch with any questions, I'll help where I can. I'll be keeping this resources page up to date. farmmarketingsolutions.com/resources/broilers
feathers for fly fishers or fly tyers. It is very important to make sure that feathers match ie left side and right side. White feathers are easy to dye or colour. Different parts of the bird give different feathers with different properties for fly tying.
John, do you ever have death from crates to processing? It seems like those 12ish hours in the crates could be stressful on the birds. Thank you for the videos! You are inspiring me to find a small parcel of land to give it a run!
Hey John I know that I may be late but I noticed that you have your own meat in your freezer. I just wondering how big of a freezer to handle up to 60lb. Of whole chicken for me to be able to handle and distribute them to my customers? Keep up the great work that you do and have a blessed day!
My husband and I thoroughly enjoy your videos - especially this series. We have a flock of layers and now considering raising a flock of Cornish Cross. However, we live in the mountains and while we have acreage there is little to no pasture. Any suggestions on how to raise them under these conditions?
Plug away, amigo! You're awesome for doing this, your info is spot on, easy to understand and concise! So helping out on the monetary side is not an issue, :D!!
Hey John, as always I'm late to the party but I've really enjoyed your video series. I have a question about the package and/or the book you've written. Your structures aren't suitable for our property, we get 100 km/hr winds and that high profile would take a hammering. Salatin style can almost work but even so I have to be on to the weather and take precautions on anything forecast for 50 - 60 km/hr plus for now. Anywho, my question is - Is there plenty of worthwhile info minus the tractor plans? I'm guessing there is but hey, I thought I'd touch base and let you know how much I got out of the series. We've got 50 birds in the brooder on Day 4 currently and I'll keep coming back throughout our grow out for your hints and tips.
Plug your products! Selling what you have to offer is the right thing to do for you, your family, your farming goals. Plugging is good for viewers like me, new to your channel, I'm not familiar with what you have to offer, never raised chickens before. I want to learn before I start. Your content and resources are valuable. Sell with pride, you have earned it, well done. Thank you. One question. I have only watched a few of your videos. I heard you say you are located in the North East. Maybe you don't want to say exactly, I would understand the reasons for that. North of Virginia?
I have a few broilers that are at 15 weeks. They were given to me because the owners children turned them in to pets. They are very big and fully feather. Would you say they are absolutely ready to eat.
I am just getting to the end of your series and I am wondering if you thought about doing another run with a variety of heritage breeds in their own tractor and you can do an analysis of the yield difference.
John GREAT series. The 50 birds I just did I completely broke down the 30 I kept ( breast/tenderloin/wings/thigh-leg combo....and carcasses were boild for broth:) ) and sold the other 20 whole to friends/family. That worked out great for my freezer space and most importantly that is how my wife wanted it :)....how she mostly cooks chicken. - Mike
In order to sell legally at the farmers' market and my wholesale accounts I need to do it under inspection. Also it's easier for me to get insurance with inspected birds.
Thanks Jon I have been watching since day 1 I really enjoyed it but I have a question do you use light during the night after taking the birds from the backyard?
How much rest would you recommend for the pasture before you go over same area with another round of chickens? I know this depends on soil fertility, pasture productivity, ect., but what would you say is a middle ground number? How long do you give?
Do you find that if you leave your own yard tractor birds for a longer time I notice they are quite large which is good but does it effect them as they look a little crowded or do you let more air flow through by rolling up the tarps a bit.. I love the idea of letting your private stock so to speak get larger as we also like a 6 to 8 pound bird to roast for friends and family?.
Thank you for answering my question. Continue doing a great job. It might look as if not financially rewarding as your doing it for "free" we truly appreciate your honesty, kindness, love for your audience. What your doing is priceless when you touch someone heart that person on able to put in place what you taught us, on implement it on able to feed there family that is rewarding. love from Jamaica
Pastured Poultry Profits Chapter 13. Pasture length. I've been keeping mine in the three to four inch length. Yours seems much higher and appears to get thatched and trampled. What are your thoughts John? Additionally, why don't you stagger the pens to improve rain runoff and airflow? Thanks.
Grass length for me depends on times on whether I can get out to mow before them. The weather has been so dry that if I had gone through and cut the grass it would have turned brown by the time the chickens got it. Leaving it a little longer was a way for me to keep it a little greener. My grass length isn't always "perfect". But I try. I keep the pens together because I've never had an issue with airflow or water runoff. I also keep them closer because it is more secure from predators for me this way. Thanks for the questions!
Thanks for the reply John. I'm looking forward to the upcoming videos. I too am at week 8 with my freedom rangers. I plan on processing the cockerels over the weekend.
hi John what labels do you use or how do you lable them when i get mine back from the procesor they are partialy frozen and the condensation/frst on the bag prevents the labels I have from sticking
The short version is that I'm at the end of my current layers and they go to the stew pot in the next couple weeks. I'll have no animals over the winter. Then I am re-approaching egg layers in 2017.
Well done series. Have you had any issues with wind flipping these tractors? We had a similar design, but more of a hoop and had some strong winds flip them and crash them into trees. I like the taller design but need something more wind resistant. What's you experience.
I've really enjoyed the series, and look forward to more. Plan on buying the book and building a tractor. How does all this go from "pasture" to "backyard" where space and growth is limited?
Growth isn't necessarily limited. If you don't mow as often in the areas you're going to have birds running then they will have forage on the average lawn. Just make sure you don't use any chemicals to treat your lawn. One of the chicken tractors takes up 60 square feet. It moves about 35 times on your grass. Preferably not covering the same ground twice. That's 2100 square feet.
CT native here. But living in the opposite north corner. Have always done egg layers, after watching this and sharing it with my family, we are considering building one chicken tractor and trying it out. Would love to come see your farm sometime, right now I work on a farm in Mansfield. Anyways, I really appreciate you taking the time to make this series, and the passion you put into it. Thank you so much!
I know I am late to the party but I just binge watched these 8 videos. By far the best pastured poultry series on UA-cam. I'm going too be purchasing your packet for sure, nice work John you do an excellent job.
That's way cool to hear Luke. I am glad you liked the series. I have been working to collect all my resources, put out a ton of free content, and grow the community of people wanting to farm. Glad to hear some of it is working, haha.
Great one, first and most informative and educative series in the poultry, free range system, thanks alot.,
This has been a great series. Thanks for putting all this together
You're welcome Brian. And thank you for following along and always commenting.
It's week 8 with 35 ready and very little losses for us! Thank you!!
John, I want to thank you for this series. I really appreciate all the time you've put into educating your followers. I ordered your book yesterday (from Amazon) and I'm excited for it to arrive. You're an inspiration to not only me but my family as well. God Bless you AND your family and business!!! Thanks Again!!
This was very helpful. We are planning to raise meat chickens on our homestead and your information was great.
Wow, John, you are amazing! What a wealth of information I've received from watching your week-by-week series. I feel like I've had an internship or a course at the local college, no kidding. I bought your book and it is very well done. Many thanks for all the time and effort you've put into these videos to share with us!
Wow, thanks Duane. I certainly have fun putting it together.
Feathers are great to compost for your gardens. Farmers do use manure and feathers for natural fretilzer.
feathers can be made into feather meal which is used as a fertiliser for your garden :)
I recently came across your videos, pure awesomeness!!! I thought I ordered 15 birds, but ended up with 26 broilers because the other people decided against it... Lots of scrambling to make space, get feeders, etc.! Lol!! I have been binge watching your vids, and they are fantastic! I have several doctors who want to buy my home grown birds, but I can't sell them cut up due to regs in my state. I can, however, sell them live, 😊. Thank you for all your help and passion!
8:25 "Sunshine grows this and then birds eat it and they convert it into deliciousness." - Love this.
If that isn't "farm science" I don't know what is.
grind up feathers for compost
Cook some so we can see the deliciousness.TY for the time and effort involved in sharing the process of becoming an Independent American Farmer.
mmmm the deliciousness is so good! I've got a simple recipe that I'll share in video 10.
John, great series. I have purchased your book on Amazon and will implement your system next year on our farm. We have already implemented your pastured egg system this year and it is working great! Looking forward to the pastured pig series.
Yup, those areal pictures are powerful. selling points
Excellent series. Thank you for taking the time to do this. Looking forward to getting my book in the mail.
Love the videos. I'm moving to New Milford soon and will one day start a small flock for my home birds. Would love to drive to kent one day and pick your brain and see your layout and everything.
Thanks for making and uploading this series. Very easy to listen to from a Englishman as you don’t speak proper English 🤣 but a great series well done , enjoyed it a whole lot
I wish I were closer to buy your product. The passion, joy and care must find its way into those broilers, and they must be delicious. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and enthusiasm.
The cool thing is that "I" am everywhere. There might be someone in your area that produces chicken like I do.
chickens are sooooo funny. i was cleaning my coop today, and my laying hens literally tried to jump on my shovel, and attack my rake. :-I
A few tips from 25 years of growing and selling chickens, If your a homesteader the best way to save freezer space and time if you are processing your own, is to cut them in half and stack them in the freezer. If you are selling your birds and home processing, be sure to check with your state laws. Some states will not let you sell anything but a whole bird. And some have a limit as to how many you can sell from the from. Example: in my home state of Vermont, I can only sell 999 birds off the farm before i need to pay an inspected processor or build a massive facility and hire my own state inspector. Each state has there own set of laws regarding poultry.
In your Broiler Video Course...are you going to be discussing seasonal raising of Broilers? I'm near Chicago Illinois...so obviously can't do it all year...but would be more interested in the video course if it goes into detail on that aspect as well.
watching your videos, are like my eyes are opening.....i appreciate you
Thanks man
Just ordered your book John. Keep up the good content.
Thank you, John. This has been a great series. I feel equipped to begin planning for MY chickens for next year.
YES Julee!!! Chickens are great. There's so much to learn and experience and enjoy. You're going to love it. Keep in touch with any questions, I'll help where I can. I'll be keeping this resources page up to date. farmmarketingsolutions.com/resources/broilers
Thanks!
Hi John,
This was an awesome series... Thank you so much for sharing all of this info.
You're welcome Paul
feathers for fly fishers or fly tyers. It is very important to make sure that feathers match ie left side and right side. White feathers are easy to dye or colour. Different parts of the bird give different feathers with different properties for fly tying.
Another fantastic video! You’re now my go to guy for info. Thanks!
Feathers are great for compost
Good afternoon I would like to know what is the food ration during the 8 weeks and how many chickens do you place per square meter
You should really have more subscribers! Your content is really fun and infôrmative !
Thanks buddy
I agree. Some good brass and tack stuff here.
Yes
Love the practical approach to your series. Could I inquire about the grass mix in your chicken tractor fields.
John, do you ever have death from crates to processing? It seems like those 12ish hours in the crates could be stressful on the birds. Thank you for the videos! You are inspiring me to find a small parcel of land to give it a run!
love those ground level close up chicken shots
I have had a lot of fun running the camera for this series.
Thank you John! I have enjoyed your videos immensely. I also was taken in by the "shameless plug" and bought your book!
Hey thanks James! One step closer to 1 Million Chickens!!! Enjoy the book and let me know if you have any questions.
Great videos. Thank you. What kind of temps can chickens withstand inside of the chicken sleds?
Thanks for putting this series together
It seemed that I saw the birds free on the grass. Did I? How does that work? So how many cycles do you do in the season?
Those before and after photos are amazing. Can someone savvy put those side by side on Google Images?
Hey John I know that I may be late but I noticed that you have your own meat in your freezer. I just wondering how big of a freezer to handle up to 60lb. Of whole chicken for me to be able to handle and distribute them to my customers? Keep up the great work that you do and have a blessed day!
PpGood afternoon I would like to know what is the food ration during the 8 weeks and how many chickens do you place per square meter
Man I did not think of the needed freezer space... thanks for the heads up
wow i think this is the best chicken video ive watched so far....great work.
Thanks Muhammad!
Great video! Do you keep the livers and gizzard.
This has been so great. Thanks so much for doing these videos.
You're certainly welcome
My husband and I thoroughly enjoy your videos - especially this series. We have a flock
of layers and now considering raising a flock of Cornish Cross. However, we live in the mountains and while we have acreage there is little to no pasture. Any suggestions on how to raise them under these conditions?
Really looking forward to the 9th video.
Can you use these same tractors for Turkeys?
Also, for your area, what is the earliest day you would receive chicks?
Devin, did you try using the tractors for Turkeys?
Plug away, amigo! You're awesome for doing this, your info is spot on, easy to understand and concise! So helping out on the monetary side is not an issue, :D!!
Thanks buddy
What kind if grass do the eat ? Can you use a variety of grasses all mixed together?
Hey John, as always I'm late to the party but I've really enjoyed your video series. I have a question about the package and/or the book you've written. Your structures aren't suitable for our property, we get 100 km/hr winds and that high profile would take a hammering. Salatin style can almost work but even so I have to be on to the weather and take precautions on anything forecast for 50 - 60 km/hr plus for now. Anywho, my question is - Is there plenty of worthwhile info minus the tractor plans? I'm guessing there is but hey, I thought I'd touch base and let you know how much I got out of the series. We've got 50 birds in the brooder on Day 4 currently and I'll keep coming back throughout our grow out for your hints and tips.
Great work the best i have seen so far
How do you keep predators out? Dont they try and dig under the tractors or tear up the plastic?
Plug your products! Selling what you have to offer is the right thing to do for you, your family, your farming goals. Plugging is good for viewers like me, new to your channel, I'm not familiar with what you have to offer, never raised chickens before. I want to learn before I start. Your content and resources are valuable. Sell with pride, you have earned it, well done. Thank you.
One question. I have only watched a few of your videos. I heard you say you are located in the North East. Maybe you don't want to say exactly, I would understand the reasons for that. North of Virginia?
You mention CSA is a few of your videos. What is that? Can you provide more information on how to start with a CSA?
What is your average weight after processing per bird and have you ever tried just cockerels for extra weight per bird
what about snakes and predators? how secure are the chicken tractors?
I know this is old but Justin Rhodes found a huge snake eating a chicken in his chicken tractor.
Use carpenter cloth instead of chicken wire. Snakes can't get through it.
Sample of the Carpenter Clothe please
They look super healthy and happy. Nice job.
Thank you Michael
Hey! thank you, it really inspired me on raising chickens.
Wish I was in the US, just so I could visit mate. Outstanding job, well done.
I processed 10 birds, just me. They went 8 wks. But we’re smallish though I fed them well. I had zero mortality.
Just wondering... about how much does your chick. tractor cost to build if all the materials we're purchased in store.?? What's a range of cost?
Thnx
John do you ever garden the area that the birds have been on?
Have you ever used a airaiter on the soil after the season ?
I have a few broilers that are at 15 weeks. They were given to me because the owners children turned them in to pets. They are very big and fully feather. Would you say they are absolutely ready to eat.
So what happens after? Do you start all over again immediately? Or do you wait for summer?
You could make Feather Meal fertilizer
That's a good idea. I'll have to look into that.
Would love to hear about this once you get more info. Great idea +Michael McMillan!
Thats exactly what i was thinking... high in Sulfur and Calcium
I am just getting to the end of your series and I am wondering if you thought about doing another run with a variety of heritage breeds in their own tractor and you can do an analysis of the yield difference.
my back yard isn't that big and I am getting 25 chicks for ffa how do you suggest I raise them
Is it possible to message you to ask a few questions. I’m in week 8 of my first set of broilers.
John GREAT series. The 50 birds I just did I completely broke down the 30 I kept ( breast/tenderloin/wings/thigh-leg combo....and carcasses were boild for broth:) ) and sold the other 20 whole to friends/family. That worked out great for my freezer space and most importantly that is how my wife wanted it :)....how she mostly cooks chicken. - Mike
Hey John why don't you do the processing yourself? I know you must have given your reason(s) before in a previous video but I missed it.
In order to sell legally at the farmers' market and my wholesale accounts I need to do it under inspection. Also it's easier for me to get insurance with inspected birds.
Thanks Jon I have been watching since day 1 I really enjoyed it but I have a question do you use light during the night after taking the birds from the backyard?
How much rest would you recommend for the pasture before you go over same area with another round of chickens?
I know this depends on soil fertility, pasture productivity, ect., but what would you say is a middle ground number? How long do you give?
the feathers can be used for fly fishing.
How much land do you need to support one tractor, if it's moved everyday?
2100 square feet
Do you freeze birds that are not sold immediately, or do you pretty much get rid of all the birds immediately after processing?
Do you find that if you leave your own yard tractor birds for a longer time I notice they are quite large which is good but does it effect them as they look a little crowded or do you let more air flow through by rolling up the tarps a bit.. I love the idea of letting your private stock so to speak get larger as we also like a 6 to 8 pound bird to roast for friends and family?.
So you stil use commercial Feed? how may lbs commercial feed is required per bird?
Do you own the white plastic crates you use for transporting them to the processor or do they provide them?
How much do you make off 50 chickens? Income and Profit
I totally just binge watched this whole series
Fantastic news John. Thanks.
No problem Terri
thank you john, I just could not wait to see the end product. Also
Thank you for answering my question. Continue doing a great job. It might look as if not financially rewarding as your doing it for "free" we truly appreciate your honesty, kindness, love for your audience. What your doing is priceless when you touch someone heart that person on able to put in place what you taught us, on implement it on able to feed there family that is rewarding. love from Jamaica
Thank you so much Delicia. Doing my best over here to keep it fun.
Pastured Poultry Profits Chapter 13. Pasture length. I've been keeping mine in the three to four inch length. Yours seems much higher and appears to get thatched and trampled. What are your thoughts John? Additionally, why don't you stagger the pens to improve rain runoff and airflow? Thanks.
Grass length for me depends on times on whether I can get out to mow before them. The weather has been so dry that if I had gone through and cut the grass it would have turned brown by the time the chickens got it. Leaving it a little longer was a way for me to keep it a little greener. My grass length isn't always "perfect". But I try.
I keep the pens together because I've never had an issue with airflow or water runoff. I also keep them closer because it is more secure from predators for me this way.
Thanks for the questions!
Thanks for the reply John. I'm looking forward to the upcoming videos. I too am at week 8 with my freedom rangers. I plan on processing the cockerels over the weekend.
hi John what labels do you use or how do you lable them when i get mine back from the procesor they are partialy frozen and the condensation/frst on the bag prevents the labels I have from sticking
WELL DONE. Amazing editing ! the video keeps you hook,!
Thanks Hector. Trying to marry educational and interesting. Love doing what I'm doing.
thanks for the massive amount of info! an i will be getting your guide. thank you
Thanks Avery
Would you be able to do an egg layer update?
The short version is that I'm at the end of my current layers and they go to the stew pot in the next couple weeks. I'll have no animals over the winter. Then I am re-approaching egg layers in 2017.
I’m in the NE also. What’s the name of the processor do you use? I am looking for one
Well done series. Have you had any issues with wind flipping these tractors? We had a similar design, but more of a hoop and had some strong winds flip them and crash them into trees. I like the taller design but need something more wind resistant. What's you experience.
Did you plant a special grass for them ? What kind of grass do you have there?
my native grasses have done quite well. I'm lucky enough to have great pasture. I just treat it with respect and it respects me.
Anyone have experience with raising chickens this way and results of big storm , lots of rain?
do you have any modification ideas for using this tractor for laying hens year around????
You'd really want to be in a warmer climate to use this for layers year round. It is more meant for seasonal production.
what kind of fence do you use around the chicken tractors the electric
What would be the "average" price per bird at your USDA facility?
Great info, not sure if I missed it, how did go about making your chicken waterer ?
Weldone
Do u use any material for the base of the housing .
Thanks in anticipation
is there a pecking order within each tractor?
I've really enjoyed the series, and look forward to more. Plan on buying the book and building a tractor. How does all this go from "pasture" to "backyard" where space and growth is limited?
Growth isn't necessarily limited. If you don't mow as often in the areas you're going to have birds running then they will have forage on the average lawn. Just make sure you don't use any chemicals to treat your lawn. One of the chicken tractors takes up 60 square feet. It moves about 35 times on your grass. Preferably not covering the same ground twice. That's 2100 square feet.