Reason #1...We know what the chickens eat.
You are what you eat. Do you know what happens to the health of an animal when it consumes genetically-modified foods? The 2008 Emmy-award winning documentary Food, Inc. attempts to answer this question and the conclusions are unsettling. One conclusion is that the large-scale production farms are managing to make a profit at the sacrifice of the health and living conditions of the animals and, ultimately, by sacrificing the flavor and nutritional quality of your food. Our solution to this problem is to raise our chickens on pasture.
Before the chickens get to the pasture, we need to ensure, from the day we get them, that they have a great, healthy start to their life. We pick up our chicks the day they are hatched at Abendroth's Hatchery in Waterloo, Wisconsin. The hatchery could send them through the mail, getting them to our farm the day after they hatch. But sitting in a box on a hot USPS truck would stress the little chickies, and stressed chicks often get sick.
Cornish Cross broiler chicks start in our brooder |
Reason #2...The birds are healthier on the pasture.
According to Jeff Mattocks, a leading authority on poultry nutrition, the #1 cause for disease among poultry is poor air quality. Tens of thousands of dollars are spent by the mega-industry farms in their livestock and poultry barns to import the air quality of the outdoors to the indoors. By raising our birds on pasture, their air-quality is as natural as can be.
Moving Day! Three week-old chicks move to the pasture pen. |
This may sound like some sort of psychobabble, but it has been proven that chickens raised in low-stress environments grow better. This translates into a more delicious and flavorful bird. We provide that low-stress environment through the sturdy structure of the movable pasture pen.
Our 10x15 foot pasture pen, welded by our 13 year-old son, Raphael |
Rex, poultry guardian extraordinaire |
Content, curious chickens |
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