FIELD DRESSING, SKINNING, BUTCHERING to FREEZER - Large Game Processing - DeerFIELD DRESSING, SKINNING, BUTCHERING, QUARTERING, DEBONING, PREP FOR FREEZER of LARGE GAME Animals. Everything you Need to Know to Process Your Own Animal. Step by Step, Easy, Detailed Instructions. Be Self Sufficient, Do it Yourself from Beginning to end . SUPPLIES USED IN THIS VIDEO: http://wyomingtaxidermy.blogspot.com/2014/10/field-to-freezer-large-game-processing.html
MORE FREE VIDEOS FROM RICK:
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For More Videos, Q & A's, Instructions and Supplies I Use, Visit my Website: “Everything Wild Taxidermy, Flintknapping, DIY Life” http://wyomingtaxidermy.blogspot.com
HOW TO KILL A PIG FASTlearn how to kill a pig your self. fresh meat is better. this pig on the video is a 200 lbs pig............HOW TO BUTCHER A HOG
como matar un marrano. aprende a matar un puerco y disfruta de carne fresca. este marrano en el video peso 200 lbs.......
ASI SE MATAN LOS PUERCOS EN GUERRERO COCHOS..
Backyard Chickens As a Family ProjectYes, in a growing number of cities across the country (Portland, Oregon being one of them), it's legal to raise chickens in your own backyard. In this video, we visit one homeowner who has successfully incorporated a variety of egg laying chickens into his daily lifestyle.
In this short video, Jeffrey Crinklaw shares his story how he ended up having chickens, and the types of chickens that he raises on his property.
Food Farmer Earth - a journey of wide discovery about our food
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Visit Cooking Up a Story for more stories, recipes, photos, and complete written posts
http://cookingupastory.com
Cooking Up a Story channel on YouTube
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Don't Support Factory Farming: How to Raise Your Own Pigs For MeatBecky gives you ideas on how to raise pigs for meat. She gives you a tour of her pig pen, shows you how she gets it ready, then Becky visits a local pig farmer to pick up her two new baby pigs.
How to Milk a CowI'm Jill from www.theprairiehomestead.com, and today I'm showing you how I milk my cow.
Backyard chickens - Chicken coop tour- Easy to cleanIn this video I will take you on a tour of my easy maintenance chicken coop. Please give it a thumbs up if it was helpful! I will try to answer any questions if you have them. Thanks!
Eric
Otra cosita, hablo español tambien. Si me quieren hacer unas preguntas en español, las contesto. :-)
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FAQ
1) How much did this cost to build?
*****Total, i would say we put close to 1000 into the coop, but that includes things like the watering buckets, PVC pipe, and the feed dispenser. Construction stuff has gotten so stinkin expensive! Part of the issue was the size i chose for the coop (5 X 6) which meant a significant amount of waste (plywood sheets are 4X8. If you would do a 4X4 coop, you could probably cut that number in half. Get your hinges at harbor freight and see if you can find a cheap window at a shed supply place. Also, the black wire i used for the run was quite a bit more than economy stuff but i liked it more.
2) Would I change anything about the way this was built?
***** In hindsight, yes, I would. a) After I created this video I had to relocate the water bucket because the chickens got too tall to use it. If the coop had been 2 or 3 inches higher off the ground it woulda worked out okay. b) Also, I am 6'5" tall, and I wish the run were at least that tall. It makes for some back breaking work to walk around in there as it is now. c) I know many people say ya don't need to heat a coop, but this one is very big for the number of birds that I have so their body heat alone is not able to keep it humanely warm on these cold nights. (I'd add more chickens but the run is the right size for this number of birds). All that to say, I wish I had done one of two things...insulated the coop with some foam or designed it so that I could put a temporary winter wall in the inside (reducing the size of their sleeping area and making it easier for them to keep it warmer with their body heat alone). Did that make any sense??
3) Why the sand?
*****I realize sand isn't as nice for the chickens as grass, but the grass was gone about two days after putting the chickens in the run...and then I had mud (which, in this part of Pennsylvania is slow draining). I felt like like sand would at least cut down on the mud and help keep their feet a little dryer. The sand is probably 2 or 3 inches deep, and they seem to churn it up enough that smell hasn't been a real issue. I did dig out and replace all the sand once in the last 8 months.
4) Do I have blueprints of what I did here?
*****No, I kinda had a vague idea of what I wanted to do and made it up as I went. But enough people have asked me for them that I am trying to get those together for you all by spring. Subscribe and stay tuned and you will be the first to see them when they are done!
5) How many eggs do you get?
*****These are golden comet chickens, and I am BLOWN AWAY by the number of eggs they have been producing. I have 7 chickens and I VERY rarely have a day when we don't get 7 eggs. I expect that they have got to slow down for the winter (I live in Pennsylvania), but I've been saying that for a number of weeks now!? It's now January 7th.
6) How easy is it to care for chickens?
***In the spring, summer, and fall caring for the chickens was a lot easier than I expected it would be. In the winter there is an added challenge if you live somewhere its cold, because you gotta make sure the water doesn't freeze. I have my hose put away for the winter so i gotta walk the water out there.
I now have bins under the roosts where I collect their droppings and that cuts down on how often I need to clean out all the bedding. You'll probably want to empty those bins once a week and clean out the whole coop once a month or so. Other than that, collect the eggs, give them food and fresh water. With this setup, and an additional water bucket I can go away for 5 days at a time without worrying too much about them. I just arrange for neighbors to pick up the eggs (which they don't seem to mind if it means free eggs)
If you start trying to pack too many birds into a small coop/ run, that's where you might run into more problems with the birds not getting along well. This could mean isolating birds and treating sores; I avoided all that by giving them plenty of space.
Thanks for the thumbs up everyone! If this was helpful and you haven't given it a thumbs up yet I would appreciate it.
The Urban Homestead - "City Chickens"February 2007 - Backyard poultry enthusiast & urban homesteader, Jordanne Dervaes talks about raising chickens in the city. Guest staring 'Miss Clementime' a bantam black cochin. Urban pioneer, Jordanne, lives on a revolutionary urban homestead in Pasadena with her family and menagerie of animals (chickens, goats and ducks)
For more about their revolutionary urban homestead project urban sustainable living and homesteading check out their website at www.PathtoFreedom.com
[Footage courtesy of Larry Frank of LPG Productions a pitch tape for Hallmark Channel's 'New Morning']
Garden Girl TV: How to Build a Chicken Tractor 1Part one of seven in Patti, Patti the Garden Girls, how to build a chicken tractor series.
Read the companion article here: http://www.gardengirltv.com/how-to-build-a-chicken-tractor.html
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Besos,
Patti
How to raise Meat ChickensIn this video we explain how to raise "All Natural" pastured poultry.
FIELD DRESSING LARGE GAME - DeerFIELD DRESS LARGE GAME - Deer. Easy to Follow, Detailed, Step by Step Instructions. Technique can also be used on other LARGE ANIMALS AND GAME. SUPPLIES USED IN THIS VIDEO: http://wyomingtaxidermy.blogspot.com/search/label/FIELD%20DRESSING
MORE FREE VIDEOS FROM RICK: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuZnD9mnjx8Yh6-KiTPLU_A
Tips, Q & A Forums, List of Supplies I Use & Videos at My Website: “Everything Wild Taxidermy, Flintknapping, DIY Life” http://wyomingtaxidermy.blogspot.com
How To Butcher A Pig.(The Ultimate Pig Butchery Video).This is a video showing how to Butcher A Whole Pig,the whole process from start to finish.A very detailed and close up, film on how to process a fantastic English Pig,to achieve all the Cuts Of Pork, used in a Butchers shop.Many thanks.
Bees for beginners part 1A 4 part how to movie on getting started with bee keeping.
Breeding Rabbits FAQMy answers and advice on some of the questions I get asked on rabbit breeding.
How to Milk a GoatA quick run through on how to milk your goat. It's easier than you think! Brought to you by www.theprairiehomestead.com
Custom Brooders: Gail Damerow's Hatching & Brooding Your Own Chicks"A chick, chick here and a chick, chick there; here a chick, there a chick, everywhere a chick, chick." That was the situation in Gail Damerow's barn each spring, when the place was wall-to-wall cardboard boxes full of chicks, guinea keets, and turkey poults. Finally she decided enough was enough. In this video, Gail Damerow, author of Hatching & Brooding Your Own Chicks, shows the custom brooding facility she and her husband designed and built in an underused part of their barn. They divided the brooder into four sections to accommodate hatchlings of different species and different age groups. Each section works independently of the others, and could easily be adapted to construction as a single brooder or as a freestanding, movable unit.
Gail Damerow and her husband operate a family farm in Tennessee where they keep poultry and dairy goats, tend a sizable garden, and maintain a small orchard. They grow and preserve much of their own food, make their own yogurt and ice cream, and bake their own bread. Gail has written extensively on raising livestock, growing fruits and vegetables, and related rural skills. She shares her experience and knowledge as a regular contributor to Backyard Poultry magazine, as a contributor to numerous other periodicals, and as the author or contributor to more than a dozen country skills how-to books including Hatching & Brooding Your Own Chicks, Storey's Guide to Raising Chickens, The Chicken Encyclopedia, The Chicken Health Handbook, Your Chickens, Your Goats, and Draft Horses and Mules.
How to pluck a chicken in 14 seconds - Homemade Whizbang Chicken PluckerHere is another one from us. 2 Chickens at once. :-)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kk94xyJ4Htc
This is our homemade Whizbang Chicken Plucker. It can do up to 3 birds at a time. They come out just as clean and feather free as can be (if properly scalded). It cut the 20+/- minute job of plucking by hand - down to less than 30 seconds (14 in this case). This did not bruise the meat at all. Just in case you might ask - YES the chickens were already dead when we put them in.
COSTS:
$220 for featherplate, shaft, bearings, pulleys, drum, fingers
$60 for a used 1 HP motor (Craigslist find)
$10 for a belt
$30 for wood and screws
$20 for wheels and an axle
$10 for pipe handle
$3 for bucket (motor guard to keep it dry)
$22 for cord and waterproof switch
TOTAL COST = $375
Here is another one from us. 2 Chickens at once. :-)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kk94xyJ4Htc
Rabbit raising Part 1 homesteading, survival, survivalist, peak oil, long term food storageDon't know what youtube has changed in the uploading process but this is the SIXTH try in uploading this video. Been at it for nearly a full DAY......
Part 1 of our new series on raising rabbits looks at equipment needed for rabbit raising as well as helpful hints in getting started. This series has been in the works for six months as we have tried to capture video of kits at various ages and stages of growth.
This new series is about raising rabbits for MEAT, i.e, to EAT. Be forewarned that we will discuss rabbit raising in that format and later videos will show some butchering - with a warning before it actually comes up. So for the PETA crowd, men of the other gender and the "we won't eat anything with eyes" crowd, you'll probably want to skip these videos.
17 years in the preparedness and survival business.
How to kill and pluck a chicken for food (graphic)This is how you make chicken the old way. No hormones, no greasy bucket and no drive thru.
Milking Sheep - Hand Milk Dairy Sheep - Dairy Sheep Milk - How to hand milk sheepKarras Farm shows you how to hand milk an East Friesian Sheep. This video demonstrates how to properly hand milk sheep. Our East Friesian sheep are genetically selected to be high milk producers and easy to hand milk for thoes small farms and independant sheep owners that do not have the ability to use milking machinery. Please visit our blogs as well for more information on dairy sheep farming. http://eastfriesiansheep.com and http://awassisheep.com. Thank you for watching! Andy Karras - Karras Farm
Rabbit TractorInspired by Joel Salatin and Nature's Harmony Farm, I put my rabbits in a chicken type tractor. The rabbits are much happier. I stopped feeding them pellets, but the rabbits are pretty skinny. I think I need to come up with a better feed option.
Learn how to milk a goat by handThis video will walk you through step by step instructions on how to milk a goat by hand. More details are available at the Life Slice website at http://www.life-slice.com/how-to-hand-milk-a-goat.html