Compost Chicken System: Difference between revisions
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*A buck per chicken, indicating that the industry standard is a loss leader - [http://greenmachinefarm.com/chicken-economics-ranger-vs-cornish/] | *A buck per chicken, indicating that the industry standard is a loss leader - [http://greenmachinefarm.com/chicken-economics-ranger-vs-cornish/] | ||
*Dressing percentage for heritage chicken is 68-70% - [http://chatham.ces.ncsu.edu/growingsmallfarms/GrowerGuidelines.pdf] | *Dressing percentage for heritage chicken is 68-70% - [http://chatham.ces.ncsu.edu/growingsmallfarms/GrowerGuidelines.pdf] | ||
==Videos== | |||
Background: Overview of the process at Vermont Compost: | |||
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<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/vLl3Nf6vBNc" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe> | |||
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==Internal Links== | ==Internal Links== | ||
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* OSE Blog April 2016: [http://opensourceecology.org/introducing-a-new-distributive-enterprise-grain-free-eggs-and-aquaponic-greens/ "Introducing a New Distributive Enterprise: Grain-Free Eggs and Aquaponic Greens"] | * OSE Blog April 2016: [http://opensourceecology.org/introducing-a-new-distributive-enterprise-grain-free-eggs-and-aquaponic-greens/ "Introducing a New Distributive Enterprise: Grain-Free Eggs and Aquaponic Greens"] | ||
* Treehugger: [http://www.treehugger.com/corporate-responsibility/how-grow-chickens-without-buying-grain.html "How to grow chickens without buying grain"] | * Treehugger: [http://www.treehugger.com/corporate-responsibility/how-grow-chickens-without-buying-grain.html "How to grow chickens without buying grain"] | ||
[[Category:Food and Agriculture]] | [[Category:Food and Agriculture]] |
Revision as of 14:22, 23 July 2016

Building on the work of compost connoisseur Karl Hammer and permaculture educator Geoff Lawton, we’ll be testing whether a small farm can run a profitable egg enterprise by feeding chickens on local food wastes, producing compost as a by-product. Details of the system are published here on this page.
Chickens can be fed on worms, bugs, food waste and forage alone. This can eliminate the need for grain purchases entirely. Please have a look at the approach that Karl Hammer of Vermont Compost has taken.
Typical Economics
- A buck per chicken, indicating that the industry standard is a loss leader - [1]
- Dressing percentage for heritage chicken is 68-70% - [2]
Videos
Background: Overview of the process at Vermont Compost:
Internal Links
- Most relevant: Compost Chicken on Steroids with Geoff Lawton
- Chicken
- Chicken Market Research
- Fertilized Chicken Eggs
- Automatic Chicken Door
- Top Heritage Chicken Breeds for Meat
- Agriculture Log
More information: grain-free eggs
- OSE Blog April 2016: "Introducing a New Distributive Enterprise: Grain-Free Eggs and Aquaponic Greens"
- Treehugger: "How to grow chickens without buying grain"