Hello,Hi there!
okay I have done a ton of reading and I am getting no straight concise answer on this.
What age do you dispatch your meat rabbits?
TIA
Wow! I never even thought to weigh them. Lol. I was aiming for 10-12 weeks. How in the world do you weigh them without them hopping away!?!ROFLYou will not get a concise answer. Just like you won't get a concise answer on how to cook your steak! Different for different use or different person.
With that said, on most meat breeds a fryer (young tender frying meat) 4 to 6 pounds is ideal. The old standard used to be 4 pounds at 8 weeks. Now most people want a little bigger fryer (commercial is 5 to 6.8 pounds).
Age wise - depending on genetics, feed, watering, etc, etc.
For me, 8 to 10 weeks.
I use a hanging fish scale, with a basket hung off of it. Got it on Amazon for like $20 I think.Wow! I never even thought to weigh them. Lol. I was aiming for 10-12 weeks. How in the world do you weigh them without them hopping away!?!ROFL
What an awesome idea!I use a hanging fish scale, with a basket hung off of it. Got it on Amazon for like $20 I think.
Do you use a mechanical or a digital scale? There are so many out there it's hard to decide. The prices are all over the place.I use a hanging fish scale, with a basket hung off of it. Got it on Amazon for like $20 I think.
I don’t mind a few small fryers, but I love letting them go to 4-7 months and get a large stew/brazing rabbit. The rabbit meat at this age is fantastic if cooked properly. My carcass weights are 3.5-4.5 pounds.Bucks about 10-11 weeks if not kept as breeding stock. Does can go a fair bit longer if they can stay with mom, may be for breeding or if i want the fur.
Most are about 1 pound when packed for the freezer (rex dwarf) to 2 pounds for older does.
Freezer is small and if i can fill that with stuff i can't store outside of it, that has priority. My rabbits i can keep in a pen untill i need one for the pot. Has other extra care needs in the form of food and bedding, but i have more room for that then i have for a second or bigger freezer.
So age for dispatch varies pretty widely depending on how much freezerspace i have and how many rabbits are old/big enough and i have penspace for.
What type of rabbit breed do you have ? And what do you feed. 7-8# is a large fryer. How long do you keep the kits with the doe ?When I started breeding it used to be said the litter should average out to 4 1/2 to 5 pounds at 8 weeks. And 50% bone to meat ratio. Actually did a bit better than that when I was willing to take the time to debone a rabbit and weigh it out.
In my case it took a while to get to that goal but eventually I was able to breed up in size. A fact of which I am proud. Still fight with the right conforation and fur but that is the American Chinchilla. Perfection if it ever happens lasts 3 days and them it molts and slouches out. LOL
I like to butcher at 8 weeks because there is no silver skin. Which is a covering over the muscles down the back especially. It is a tough membrane. No real big deal when eating as a fryer I just prefer it without. Very tender meat.
But it is just myself and hubby who are eating at home. If I had a family things would be different I think.
Seems like the more popular choice now is for 12 weeks. That age is still called a Fryer. After that is is a Roaster..... at some point it becomes a Stewing rabbit. A processor I sell to wants them at 12 weeks age. Makes sense since they are larger. My kits can be about 7 or 8 pounds at that age.
I raise American Chinchilla rabbits. I've been at it for 15 years or so. I focused on size for quite a while getting them up there. Still pay close attention to it. This heritage breed's purpose was for meat and fur. While I do show, I put priority on the original purpose.What type of rabbit breed do you have ? And what do you feed. 7-8# is a large fryer. How long do you keep the kits with the doe ?
As for feed, I'm using Nutrena's 18%. That may not be a national brand though. It contains yucca schidigera root extract which helps with smell but also absorbtion of feed. I keep kits with mom till 8 weeksI raise American Chinchilla rabbits. I've been at it for 15 years or so. I focused on size for quite a while getting them up there. Still pay close attention to it. This heritage breed's purpose was for meat and fur. While I do show, I put priority on the original purpose.
Compared to a Californian or a New Zealand this breed has less meat to it. But the coat is soooo nice. Roll back fur instead of fly back.
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