My 4H project for 2015 - No, 2014!

TheSeedObsesser

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...Turkeys, White Broad-Breasted (Industrial type) turkeys! I thought I'd start a thread to document my 4H project for this year. We've just picked them up today so this would be Day 1. I've got six of them and I'm raising them with chickens because I've read that they are slow learners - they sure are! (If your are wondering, the chickens are Partridge Rocks.) I have to give the turkeys credit though, as they are functioning better than I expected. They could not eat plain food so I made mash out of it. I also had a few poults that would stick their entire heads in the water to get a drink, for that I put gravel along the bottom of the water dish to prevent them from sticking their whole heads in. I put some apple cider vinegar in their water, might put some colloidal silver in down the line, there's no way that I'm using antibiotics. I was a little nervous about doing turkeys at first as the neighbor's did them last year and only had two survive out of nearly twenty, no casualties yet and they are doing great. Here are pictures:

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lesa

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What a wonderful project! I am very interested in raising turkeys and will be looking forward to hearing all about your experiences! They sure are cute...
 

dickiebird

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Don't get attached to these birds, they grow very fast and don't do well if they are allowed to age.
Their body becomes too large for their respiratory system.
When the weather gets very warm they have a hard time breathing and moving around.
We learned from our taking in some from school projects. The teachers use these for class hatching exhibits.
When school lets out we, some how, end up with critters that no on else can take home!!!!

THANX RICH
 

Ridgerunner

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I've raised Midget Whites, but those are not the broadbreasted you are trying. The Midget Whites weren't any harder than chickens, just bigger and man can they fly. I imagine the broadbreasted like you have are going to be more like the Cornish Cross meaties chickens. It's a whole different experience. Good luck and enjoy.
 

NwMtGardener

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haha, I'm so glad to see you edit the year...both you and Digits had threads about 2015, I was like "What the heck?!" I can barely remember its not 2013 anymore! :p

Cute babies and nice set up with the stock tank!
 

canesisters

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I'll be watching too. I've wanted to get a turkey but I had heard that there was something that they can catch from being raised with chickens - and I'm not planning to put up a trukey coop. If this works well - I may add one next year.
Good Luck!!!!!
 

TheSeedObsesser

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Don't get attached to these birds, they grow very fast and don't do well if they are allowed to age.
Their body becomes too large for their respiratory system.
When the weather gets very warm they have a hard time breathing and moving around.
We learned from our taking in some from school projects. The teachers use these for class hatching exhibits.
When school lets out we, some how, end up with critters that no on else can take home!!!!

THANX RICH
I know what you're talking about, these birds were bred to be as big as they can get and unfortunately there are some health issues that go along with that. The neighbors are keeping a grown one as a pet - it can barely walk, drags it's wings on the ground, has trouble breathing, cataracts in one eye and because of that walks around in circles (it's blind in that eye). It's sad to see it suffer like that.
 

TheSeedObsesser

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I'll be watching too. I've wanted to get a turkey but I had heard that there was something that they can catch from being raised with chickens - and I'm not planning to put up a trukey coop. If this works well - I may add one next year.
Good Luck!!!!!
The turkeys can get blackhead from the chickens, but keeping them together will give the chickens immunity to - I think either Marek's or Newcastle disease (something like that). It's just like any disease though, keep the animals in good and sanitary conditions and everything should be just fine.
 

Wishin'

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Turkeys are more susceptible to disease then chickens, that is why people are always told to never keep them together. We and most people I know raise their chickens and turkeys together with no problem. I will say turkeys are next to impossible to keep alive for the first month of their lives :he they drop like flies and find the dumbest ways to die, and we raise heritage breeds, I can't imagine how hard it would be to keep meet turkeys alive. :hide But they make the most adorable noises, and there is nothing cuter than having a dozen baby turkey poults chase you around the yard like a mass of puppys. :love Actually that is one of their problems, they have no sense and will follow anything that moves, including the very large clumsy dogs, angry hens who will kill them, and sheep who don't care if something is screaming under their hoof, and of course they are so stealthy the will slip under a feed bag or 3 gallon waterer, in a heartbeat as you set it down.
 

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