Turkeys Can Be a Profitable Sideline
WHEN you
start producing food for your family, money will begin to
lose its importance. You won't be digging into your pockets
every time you turn around. First, you yourself will be
producing a good part of your food and secondly, you'll be
trading your surplus with your neighbors.
For example, we trade geese for turkeys with one of our
neighbors, Tyler Long. Ty and his father have always had a
hankering to raise turkeys. For a long time they just
talked about it, then a couple of years ago they started in
doing it.
Unlike a lot of people, including a few farmers I've met,
they were frank with themselves in admitting to begin with
that they didn't really know much about turkey
raising. They determined to find out all about the newest
and best ways of going ahead, start on a small scale. So
they talked to any number of commercial turkey men, our
county agent, and read everything they could get their
hands on about turkeys.
Just to give you an idea of how well they've done, in 1942
the national turkey mortality rate from all causes was
reported to be 28%. In 1943, when feed conditions were at
their worst in 20 years, Ty kept his mortality rate down to
15%.
While it's true that scientific turkey raising requires
certain precautions not always necessary in chicken
raising, if a few general principles are followed with
care, turkeys can be a surprisingly easy, inexpensive and
interesting way of increasing your food supply. Turkeys
incidentally, produce more meat per pound of feed than
almost any other kind of poultry.
We say this after observing Ty Long's experience raising
turkeys. In fact; we have gotten him to give detailed, week
by week, instructions, explaining exactly how a family can
scientifically raise a dozen or so turkeys.
What Breed?
By no means try to hatch out turkeys from eggs - buy
day-old chicks or poults as they are actually called. Place
your order early, sometime between December and March. The
importance of good breeding in the day-old poults cannot be
stressed too much.
Ty recommends buying them from a well-recommended
breeder rather than from a hatchery. You can get
names from the magazine, Turkey World, (Mount
Morris, III., 15c a copy) or consult your county agent.
Don't decide on a breeder farther away than 300 miles,
preferably closer. Specify shipment by Railway Express.
Most breeders specialize in Broad Breasted Bronzes - they
give more meat per pound of frame. This is a good breed to
start with, unless you want one of the smaller breeds. If,
for your family use, you'd like to wind up with eight or
ten fully grown turkeys, you'd best order 15 poults. Poults
sell for from $.50 to $.75 apiece. These 15 will probably
narrow down to twelve for the cage and eight or ten for
your family and friends. You may, of course, do much better
than this, in which case you can easily sell your surplus
at a nice little profit.
Poor sanitation and dampness, huddling caused by improper
heat control, and failure to start eating are the greatest
causes of death in young poults. Because a battery brooder
provides a maximum of sanitation and dryness, practically
eliminates huddling, and its confined quarters are a big
help in starting poults eating, we believe a battery is the
easiest and safest way to raise your turkeys for the first
four weeks. Equally important, a battery brooder reduces
labor to a minimum.
Here are Tyler Long's week-by-week instructions. Don't let
their seemingly lengthy detail discourage you. It's really
easier than it sounds, and, besides, Ty is more of a
"perfectionist" than most of us are likely to be.
Week-By-Week Instructions
These instructions are not intended to be absolute. We feel
that reasonable appli cation of them plus common sense
circumstances not discussed in this short article will
result in your successfully raising your turkeys.
From First Day To Fourth Week
At least 2 days before the poults come, completely
scrub battery, inside and out, feeders and waterers with
hot soapy water. Rinse with hot water. Spray with a warm 4%
solution of any reliable coal-tar disinfectant. Only then
will your poults be reasonably safe from germs left by the
battery's former inmates. Be sure all surfaces are
thoroughly dry before the poults come in contact with them.
Cover dropping board with newspaper to facilitate
daily removal of droppings.
At least 4 hours before poults' arrival regulate
temperature under hover (using brooder thermometer or
thermostat) to between 95° and 105°. Reduce to
90° the third day. Thereafter a drop of 5° per week
is usually advisable. However, behaviour of birds
themselves is best barometer of their comfort. Cold poults
usually huddle (their most dangerous habit), peep loudly
and protestingly. Overheated poults act drugged and
listless. Comfortable poults either sleep quietly or peep
in a low, contented voice. Above all guard against
huddling. More poults die in the first four weeks from
smothering caused by huddling than from any other single
cause.
On the other hand, it's just as important to remember that
over-heating the birds at any stage of the game tends to
produce a delicate, over-sensitive turkey. It is usually
best for the first two or three nights to wake up at 1 or 2
a.m. to see that turkeys are comfortable. This is a chore,
but a necessary one, since as many as 50% of your poults
can be killed in one night by huddling.
Before placing your poults in their new quarters, fill the
hoppers almost to overflowing with a turkey starter mash
from a reputable feed concern. (If the mash is not Vitamin
D fortified, add and mix thoroughly 1% Cod Liver oil until
the birds are out in the sun.) Sprinkle about one
teaspoonful of fine hard chick grit to each three poults on
top of the mash, so that they will get their "teeth" with
their first meal. Continue giving this grit twice weekly
until the tenth week. Fill the waterers with water the
temperature of your hand. Continue for two weeks, then
change to tap water. Keep both feeders and waterers filled
to this level until poults can reach down into them.
Some of your poults may refuse to eat when you first get
them. Put down a newspaper and scatter on it some chick
scratch. Usually they will peck at this. Next day put chick
scratch on top of mash in feeders.
Wash the waterer every day in hot soapy water. Keep it
filled with fresh, clean water. Wash feeders every ten
days. Stir old feed in with new to prevent any becoming
stale.Inspect your poults upon arrival, culling out any
malformed, injured, or dying ones. The simplest, most
humane method is to snap the neck with a quick, strong
twist of the hand. The same treatment should always be
accorded any deathly sick or badly injured birds as a
protective measure for the rest of your flock. However,
like chickens, no disease or injury to which a turkey is
susceptible can in any way render the flesh unfit for human
consumption. But any birds that are to be eaten should be
killed so that they will bleed.
Disease Control
Baby turkeys are subject to a number of diseases, the most
prevalent of which are coccidiosis and brooder pneumonia.
The former is usually recognizable by bloody droppings and
a general washed-out look to the bird. Pneumonia can
sometimes be detected by the presence of phlegm in the
nasal passage and some shivering. In each case the poult
must be segregated from the others, kept warm and dry and
fed warm milk, with an eye-dropper, if necessary. Nothing
more can be done in the case of brooder pneumonia. The
development of coccidiosis is sometimes arrested by
administering a 1% solution of Epsom salts. This must be
followed in six hours by dried skim milk mixed with the
mash or water. Commercial anti-coccidiosis agents are
sometimes found helpful. Never return the sick bird to its
regular quarters until you are fairly certain a cure has
been effected - you must not risk infecting the others.
(Lederle's Sulfaguanidine, a new "sulfa" drug, has
frequently halted rampages of coccodiosis when other
measures failed.
Keep a weather eye out for the condition known as
"pasting-up", when the poult's droppings remain stuck to
his backside. This is serious, as a poult (or chick) can
die very quickly from the poisons caused by a clogged-up
intestinal tract. Treatment we found safest: With a
medicine dropper apply several drops of inexpensive mineral
oil on and around the dropping, which will soon be worked
off. Do not try to remove it; the poult's
sensitive skin is easily injured.
From Fifth To Tenth Week
The advantages of raising turkeys in battery brooders will
turn into serious disadvantages if the birds are kept in
them after the four week period. Many growers leave poults
in batteries only 16 days. The fact that the birds are
allowed to develop neither immunity to disease-bearing
bacteria nor resistance to less favorable climatic
conditions in its protecting confines is responsible for
this. Therefore, at least at the start of the fifth week
the poults should be moved to a clean, dry, thoroughly
disinfected floor covered with at least an inch of good
quality shredded litter, preferably sugar cane shavings.
The average temperature, at the floor, of their new
quarters (section of garage, barn, enclosed porch, small
brooder house, etc), should be somewhere between a minimum
of 65° and a maximum of 75°. If it is not possible
to use the top-section of your battery as their hover (in
which case you would remove the dropping board, floor grid,
removable sides, feeders and waterer, using it only as a
source of heat and shelter on top of the litter), build or
buy a small auxiliary hover. (See Chapter on Broilers).
Such a hover, which can be quite simply constructed of
insulation board with either 2 or 3 25-watt bulbs or a
commercial heating element installed in the roof, must be
large enough and adjustable in height so as to accommodate
all the birds when they are ten weeks old, at which time
they should be more than twice the size they were at four.
The temperature should be gradually reduced (if necessary,
vary the number and size of the bulbs) so that the birds
get little artificial heat for the next to the last two
weeks and none whatever during the last two weeks.
Important considerations in selecting the poults' new
quarters are adequate ventilation facilities and a good
supply of sunlight, at times directly on the birds, if
possible. Be careful about direct drafts on the birds for
the first 3 weeks in new quarters. It would be much to your
advantage if you could provide the turkeys with direct
access to the air and sun in a small, fine gravel-covered
yard or wire-covered cage connected with their new
quarters. To accustom the poults to outside temperatures
and breezes, be sure to leave all ventilation facilities
wide open for the last ten days and nights.
Litter should be thoroughly stirred every other day and
completely changed weekly. This is necessary both to combat
germs and to keep their walking surface dry, a point of
great importance.
It is also important to keep the waterers on three-inch
high wire platforms to prevent contamination. Mash should
now be fed in a regular chick hopper, water in a one or two
quart glass or metal chick waterer. Finely chopped tender
green-stuff (lettuce, spinach, orange, cabbage, grass,
clover, etc.) can now be fed the poults to great advantage.
Scatter moderate amounts each day on top of their mash.
Otherwise, feed, grit and water conditions remain as
before. (8th week-start to mix growing mash with
starter. Gradually increase to all growing, 10th week)
From the sixth week on, a careful watch must be kept for
the most dread of all turkey illness, "blackhead." (For
identification and treatment of this and other turkey
diseases get the Dept. of Agriculture's Bulletin 1652
Diseases and Parasites of Poultry.) Sanitation and
segregation of infected birds is your best weapon in
fighting both blackhead and coccidiosis. Lederle's
Phenothiazine has arrested many epidemics of blackheads,
but cannot be guaranteed as a positive cure. If any signs
of lice are detected a very light sprinkling of drops of
"Black Leaf 40" wherever the birds bed down, be i t litter
or roost, will rid them of the torments and dangers of
lice.
From Tenth Week To Maturity
By the tenth week, under normal conditions, your poults
should move to their permanent outside quarters. However,
if poor feed or other circumstances prevent normal
development or if the weather is unfavorable, it would be
best to delay the transfer for a short time. These
permanent quarters should consist of a solidly built
wire-floored four foot high cage, with its base thirty
inches off the ground and supported by pine or fir 4 x 4's
whose bases have been dipped in creosote.
If possible, open face of roost enclosure should face
south. Sides and top of the cage may be constructed with
lath or 2" poultry netting. Great caution should be
exercised in eliminating all possible surfaces on the floor
where droppings can collect. Bevel 2" x 3"'s (on the top)
so that they will just hold staples 18" apart for the 1" by
2" flooring. A door should be placed on any side of the
cage not taken up by the feed hoppers. Eliminate all sharp
points or surfaces where the turkeys might injure
themselves.
By this time a complete change from starting to growing
mash should take place. Continue feeding chopped greens
whenever possible. The grit, still lightly sprinkled on top
of the mash twice weekly, should now be changed to broiler
size. Starting with the 12th week broiler scratch,
consisting preferably, of cracked corn, oats and wheat,
should be fed in approximately one-quarter of the hopper
space, boxed off from the rest. By the 20th week this
should have been gradually increased to half the hopper
space. Also near the 20th week the grit should be changed
to full-sized and the scratch, consisting of the same
ingredients, to full-size. Gradually increase the
percentage of grain to mash until by the 20th week the
birds are eating 50% of each. At this time it would make
for a better finished turkey if you can make the scratch
mixture 70% to 80% corn. It is possible, the last few
weeks, to increase the consumption of feed by feeding a
moist mash, made by mixing hot water on top of the dry mash
in hoppers. However, care should be taken that none of the
dry feed becomes sour. Remember the principle of finishing
turkeys is to stuff them with as much feed of high caloric
value as is possible.
An ailment known as perosis or "slipped tendon" is more
prevalent in turkeys from the tenth week on, but it
sometimes occurs earlier. Usually hereditary or nutritional
in origin, perosis is sometimes introduced through
infection. The trouble is easily recognized by the severe
lameness and crookedness of one or both of the victim's
legs. For treatment see the Farmer's Bulletin of poultry
disease, No. 1652.
Your turkeys are ready to kill when they have a fine layer
of fat covering the entire body (shown by a white or
yellowish appearance of the skin, rather than the purple
tint of the muscle tissue) and when at least 95% of the
pinfeathers have disappeared. This usually takes from 24 to
28 weeks, but any number of circumstances can delay the
finishing. If you want your turkeys to be the best you ever
tasted, you'll just have to be patient. A well finished
Broad Breasted Bronze tom should weigh a minimum of 18
pounds and often as high as 26 and 28. The hen (whose flesh
is not of a quality superior to the tom's) should
weigh from 12 to 16 or 17 pounds.
A smaller breed will weigh proportionately less. During
starving time, 18 hours before killing, provide plenty of
fresh water.
Killing and Picking
For a turkey slaughterer of amateur standing, decapitation
with a sharp axe or machete is quickest, easiest.
Immediately after the head has been severed, the bird
should be elevated so blood is allowed to drip for about
ten minutes. The plucking should take place immediately
after the blood has stopped dripping. Again, the simplest
method of plucking for amateurs is the semi-scald dip.
Using a large vessel similar to a wash tub and a cooking
thermometer to assure a temperature about 175°, the
entire body of the turkey should be immersed for about
40-50 seconds. The feathers should come out with great
ease; if not, dip again. It may be necessary to use gloves
or pliers on certain of the wing and tail feathers. After
the bird has been completely plucked, it should be hung by
feet in a room with a temperature from 30° to 40°,
and preferably, a relatively high humidity. If there is any
food in the crop, the entire crop should be removed through
a neat 3" incision in the front of the neck. Sew this up to
prever.t drying out and squeeze the vent to remove any
droppings that may be there.
The turkey may be cleaned and roasted at any time after two
days of chilling have passed; if the temperature and
humidity are correct he may be kept up to -10 days. We
recommend that you take your first bird to be cleaned to
the butcher in order that you may learn the tricks of the
trade directly from him.
Points To Remember
In conclusion, here is a digest of the cardinal principles
of scientific turkey raising. 1) Sanitation and dryness are
your most efficient weapons against disease. 2) Never
overcrowd your birds at any stage of their development.
Always provide more space rather than less. 3) Never allow
your turkeys to come in contact with chickens or any other
poultry. Keep them as far from other fowl as possible. If
the turkeys are to live in any shelter formerly used by
other poultry always thoroughly disinfect those quarters.
If there has been any disease there, always fumigate with
formaldehyde and potassium permanganate. 4) Always allow
adequate space at the feeders and waterers. This means that
every bird should be able to eat at the same time and four
birds should be able to drink at the same time. 5) Remember
that turkeys are but recently descended from their parental
wild stock - avoid all unnecessary loud noises, sudden
movements and other disquieting influences, since they are
much more timid and easily frightened than other poultry.
6) Always slip on rubbers or different shoes when going
into the turkey shelter, so as to reduce the possibilities
of infection from your chickens. Do not allow any visitors
into area where turkeys walk.
Suggested Reading:
"Starting Right With Turkeys" , ($2.75), by G. T.
Klein - A top-notch book - many illustrations - complete
details.