These are a few of the many clubs and associations linked to poultry. If you would like your club or association listed, please send your request to:Webmaster, In an attempt to provide you with increased value, we have included some third party links on our site that focus on poultry. These linked sites have separate […]
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Cackle Hatchery Poultry Breeding Farms
CACKLE HATCHERY CHICKEN BREEDING FARMS Cackle Hatchery® supplies day-old grandparent and parent stock for our own use and to a few USA poultry hatcheries. We breed, raise and provide our own proprietary selected lines of feather sexable chicks within our Feather Sexing Program. We also work on improving sex-link, auto-sexing lines and vent sexing lines. […]
Continue ReadingVaccination Policy
MAREK’S VACCINATION Cackle Hatchery® charges a flat fee of $10.00 for a Marek’s vaccination of 1-66 chicks. Anything over 66 chicks to be vaccinated we charge 15 cents a chick. Example 100 chicks to be vaccinated times .15 ea. = $15.00 fee for vaccination. These vaccinations must be given at 1 day of age. There […]
Continue ReadingBlue/Splash Laced Red Wyandottes Hatching Eggs
![Blue/Splash Laced Red Wyandottes Fertile Hatching Eggs](https://www.cacklehatchery.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/splash_laced_red_1_1-scaled-150x150.jpg)
Blue/Splash Laced Red Wyandotte Hatching Eggs – FREE SHIPPING
SOLD IN 12 PK ONLY FOR 95.76
Continue ReadingHow to Pluck a Goose
![Plucked Goose Goose without feathers](https://www.cacklehatchery.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Plucked-Goose-150x150.jpg)
A century ago the goose was considered among the most desirable species of the farm yard, and while many of its traits are still apparent to those who keep them, their popularity decreased as breeding practices for marketability of poultry advanced. Why raise a goose that will be in its prime for cooking in about […]
Continue ReadingWhat’s the Difference Between a Barred Rock and a Dominique?
![Barred Rock](https://www.cacklehatchery.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Barred-Rock-150x150.jpg)
A lot of chicken keepers who are unfamiliar with both barred Rocks and Dominiques have trouble telling the difference between them. Once you’ve seen both, though, you’ll have no trouble readily identifying which is which. First let’s get one thing straight: “Barred Rock” is not a breed. The breed is Plymouth Rock. The original color […]
Continue ReadingGeese: They’re More Than Meat and Feathers
![Goose Eggs](https://www.cacklehatchery.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/Goose-Eggs-150x150.jpg)
Goose flesh makes a delightful dinner entrée and the feathers can be used to make a comfortable pillow, but the eggs are yet another reason to raise geese. When we don’t need them for hatching, we use eggs from all our flock – turkey, duck, chicken, goose, guinea and occasionally pheasant. Nothing goes to waste. […]
Continue ReadingHow to Trim a Rooster’s Spurs — and How Not To
![Rooster Spur](https://www.cacklehatchery.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/Spur-150x150.jpg)
A chicken’s spur is an outgrowth of the leg bone, consisting of soft tissue covered with a protective sheath made of the same tough keratinous material that makes up the chicken’s claws and beak. The spur starts out as a little bony bump. As the chicken matures, the spur grows longer, curves, hardens and develops […]
Continue ReadingThe Little Red Hen that Sailed Around the World
![Monique hen who sailed world book](https://www.cacklehatchery.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Monique-150x150.jpg)
Frenchman Guirec Soudée is sailing around the world with a crew of one — a Rhode Island Red hen named Monique. “I knew I wanted to sail alone, for sure, but I wanted a pet. I thought a chicken would be brilliant, because I could have fresh eggs at sea,” Guerec told The Guardian. “I […]
Continue ReadingWhen Ordering Chicks, How Many Are Enough?
![Baby Chicks](https://www.cacklehatchery.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/Chicks-150x150.jpg)
Deciding how many chicks to order can be challenging. Often the determining factor comes down to how many you want, versus how many you need, versus how many your local regulations allow you to have. When starting a laying flock, decide how many eggs you want and size your flock accordingly. As a rough […]
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