Some figures may vary from
place to place so don't mock me.
Can you do a successful indigenous chicken business anywhere in
Africa? The answer is yes. Can you reap profits from it? Of course you can? Is
it complicated? Not at all but you need enough capital to start it.
First things first. Most farmers fail in this sector because they
fail to plan. If you fail to plan then you are planning to fail. Do you know
where farmers fail most? They start their projects without the end in mind.
Today I will describe how you can rear 1200 indigenous/ village/ kienyeji chickens in a year successfully without a headache. With this
method you can be churning out 200 birds every month for sale and laugh all the
way to the bank.
The first thing is that you should have a plan. As you know broiler
farmers plan for their batch of birds every 6 weeks, pig farmers every 5 months,
beef farmers every 2 years, rabbit farmers every 4 - 5 months.
Indigenous chicken are ready for meat at about 6 months and are sold
at between (6$) for hens and (8$) to (10$) for cockerels.
With indigenous chicken you will need to have a 6 months plan if you
are to have 200 mature chicken for sale every month. You need to have a
foundation stock (parent stock) which will be giving you eggs every 21 days for
incubation. If you remember very well in my previous article I had talked of
how to raise 300 chickens every year using 10 hens and 2 cocks. This is where
you will get your parent stock or you can buy from a very good source free from
diseases.
Take note than the cockerel for the parent birds need replacement
after one year while hens can be replaced after two years. You will have to be
patient with this business since indigenous chicken are slow growers unlike
hybrid chicken and improved indigenous chicken.
Before getting your return on investments (R.O.I) you will have to
sweat that is undeniable but after you start selling your chicken you will
remember me (I will come for a meal of chicken thighs). Get out your pen and
paper, fasten your seatbelts and travel with me to chicken kingdom.
You have your foundation stock (around 250 hens. 24 cocks included
therein.
A ratio of 1 cock to 8 hens is recommended). Indigenous chicken have
higher demand than hybrid chicken when it comes to meat because of the great
taste and most people are going organic nowadays.
You need a well-constructed house. They will need a spacing of 1
square feet per bird. During the day they will be roaming outside so you need a
chicken run with a good fence to prevent predators and thieves. The measurement
of the house will be 60ft by 20ft and 8ft high from the floor to the roof.
The poultry house will be partitioned to measure 20ft by 10ft so you
have 6 compartments and each compartment will have its individual run outside.
Construct using readily available material. You can use mud, bricks, iron
sheets or timber.
In the first month you will have the first batch of 200 chicken
which you brood in the first house. Release them outside in the run after 2 months.
The second month you have another batch of 200 chicken. You do this till the 6th
month when you will start harvesting the first batch of mature chicken.
You need an incubator that can hatch 200 chicks every 21 days. In order
to make this venture more profitable and avoid high costs of production (feeds
take 70%) you can make your own feeds. You need feed ingredients such as:
- Whole maize = 34kg
- Soya bean = 12kg
- Omena = 8kg
- Maize/wheat bran = 10kg
- Lime = 6kg
Total = 70kg of feed
During the first 2 months the chicks will consume about 1.5kg of feeds.
That will be around 300kg of feed for 2 months or 4 bags of 70kg feed.
At 3 months release them in the run and feed them on half of
commercial feeds and vegetable remains and grains such as millet and broken
wheat or grounded maize.
From 3 - 6 months they should have fed on 1000kg or 14 bags of 70kg feed
(each bird feeding on 5kg for 4 months).
Vaccination:
The vaccines to consider are: Newcastle disease vaccine and fowl pox
vaccine. In the first week vaccinate your chicks against Newcastle disease (buy
Newcastle lasota vaccine 200 doses), repeat Newcastle vaccine on the third and
5th week.
At 4 weeks for fowl pox vaccine buy 200 doses. Repeat fowl pox
vaccine at 6 weeks and Newcastle plain at 16 weeks. Notice that indigenous
chicken are resistant to most diseases but this does not mean you avoid proper
hygiene and good biosecurity measures.
Your birds are now mature at 6 months and you have batches following
at 5 months, 4 months, 3 months, 2 months and 1 month. You sell your first
batch and bring in a new batch to maintain the cycle. Each month you will be
selling birds.
Let's do a little maths. Your birds fed on 4 bags for 2 months and
14 bags for 4 months. In total you used 18 bags. Suppose a bag of homemade feed
is (15$) you will have spent (270$) on feed alone. Suppose you lose 10% of your
birds from day one to maturity. You remain with 180 birds. Let's say you have
90 hens and 90 cocks and sell hens at (6$) and cockerels at (10$) you get
(1260$).
Deduct feeds and other variables like drugs, vet services and
vaccines and you have not less than (700$) per month. It is good money by any standards.
The biggest costs when starting this project will be housing costs and fees.
From the second year you will have made enough profits after
investing and reinvesting and you can expand your business.
I believe
nothing is impossible if you are committed. Chicken farming can employ you and
can lift you to unprecedented heights of greatness and wealth. Let me not hear
you say it can't be done. It can be done and you know it.
Mine is to give you this information for free and if you feel like gifting me then go ahead I will be waiting. A dollar from each of you should make me a rich man.
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