How do you do the choke chain method without breaking the legs?
I've tried both choke chain and broomstick method and not gotten well with either.
First couple of times with the choke chain ended up bunny with broken back legs and basically strangled and a fair lot of bruising at neck, rabbit squealed, not at all nice. Hard to process with broken back legs too. Often just broke at the knee joint.
Switched to using broomstick method, actually adapted it so we hit them at the top 2 vertebrae with a steel rod to make them unconscious, then once lights out, stand on broomstick and pull rabbit....I found this made their internal organs stretch and sometimes hard to process, as it was obviously a lot of pulling especially once we've pulled the skin off too, ended up with the intestines and stomach being very weak, a couple of them split while trying to gut them....and the stench of split open inside guts is awful!!!
Wondering if maybe I should invest in an air rifle, but we are in town and have neighbours, neighbours can be nosy and I don't want anyone to look over the fence and see me killing my rabbits with a gun, they would have a shock!
I haven't tried the v-block method of cervical dislocation, it seems any pull method so far doesn't really work for me. Maybe I just don't have the muscles? But is it more about technique?
Any ideas?
Sounds like technique problems, and maybe the age of the rabbit is factoring into it. Many people prefer to harvest fryers (8-12 week-olds) because, among other considerations, everything about dispatching and skinning is easier at that age. Older rabbits are
much harder to dispatch, as their muscles are stronger and bones more stout; and their connective tissues are developed enough that they tend to hold onto their skin much more strongly, so skinning can get to be a workout.
The broomstick and choke chain methods are both cervical dislocation methods. Like
@dlynn says, "tug hard and fast." You should hear/feel the neck vertebrae separate. It doesn't take much muscle strength, but does take commitment to do that pull effectively, and it should happen in a single pull. Hold onto the entire leg on each side (also easier when it's a small fryer instead of a full-grown meat rabbit) and pull straight in line with the spine; the only angle should be at the neck. You definitely shouldn't be breaking leg bones or stretching internal organs out of shape; you should not have to pull that hard. Again, it's a sharp movement, not slow and gentle. Cervical dislocation isn't so much abut breaking the vertebrae apart, rather the goal is separating the spinal column from the brain - that's what kills the rabbit, broken bones just hurt. Of course if you pull the neck bones completely apart, that usually severs the spinal column, too.
My daughter uses a "hopper popper" mounted in the wall, similar to this:
But when I have to do it, I usually bop them on the head first - hard - to make sure they're unconscious. It's kind of violent-feeling, but I really, really,
really don't want an animal to suffer, so I do it with conviction. Our rabbits are calm; I put them on the ground, they nibble grass and they never know what hit them. Then I use a broomstick to do the dislocation, to be sure they're dead. Having the animal on the ground and pulling up means it doesn't require any muscle strength at all; you just stand up. Having the animal already unconscious means that you're not struggling with it, and can adjust as necessary without worrying about causing it pain or having it freak out.
Dispatching any animal is a learned skill. Maybe having them already unconscious would allow you to get the feel of cervical dislocation without so much agony for you and the animal.