Cover Image
close this bookBetter Farming Series 13 - Keeping Chickens (FAO - INADES, 1977, 48 p.)
View the document(introduction...)
View the documentPreface
close this folderSmall livestock farming in the villages
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View the documentLittle work but yields little
View the documentChicken farming must be improved
View the documentThe animal husbandry services help
close this folderHow to choose poultry
View the documentTraditional types of poultry
close this folderTo improve poultry
View the documentGood cocks must be selected
View the documentGood hens must be selected
View the documentGood chicks must be selected
View the documentImproved breeds
close this folderHow to feed poultry
View the documentTo feed poultry well is important and difficult
View the documentPoultry need good feed
close this folderHow poultry make use of food and water
View the document(introduction...)
View the documentEnergy feeds
View the documentBody- building feeds: proteins
View the documentMineral salts
View the documentVitamins
View the documentClean water
View the documentSpecial needs of chicks, laying hens, and table poultry
close this folderHow to protect poultry against disease
View the documentPreventing poultry from getting ill
View the documentVaccination
View the documentMain diseases of poultry
close this folderHow to house poultry
View the document(introduction...)
View the documentHow to build a poultry house
View the documentNests
View the documentFeeding troughs
View the documentDrinking troughs and fountains
close this folderThe brooder
View the document(introduction...)
View the documentHow to choose and look after hens to produce chicks
View the documentHere is an example
View the documentSuggested question paper

Improved breeds

34. At the animal husbandry centres you can get Improved breeds of poultry.

For example, here are some of the more successful crosses. In naming the crossed breeds, the breed of the male is always given first.

Rhode Island- Sussex cross

The hen is a light mahogany colour; the cock is white speckled with black.

The hen is a good layer.

In 10 months, that is about 300 days of laying, it will lay 165 to 180 eggs.

Sussex- Rhode Island cross

This cross gives birds that are white speckled with silvery black.

The hen is quite a good layer.

A three- month- old pullet will weigh from 1.5 to 1.7 kilogrammes.

Rhode Island- Wyandotte cross, also called P- 60, is a bird of dark mahogany colour.

Often the hens have a flat curly comb. The hen is a good layer.

But it dislikes damp.
The adult hen weighs between 1.7 and 2 kilogrammes.

New Hampahire- Leghorn and Rhode Island- Leghorn crosses.

These crosses often produce white birds and sometimes birds with mahogany feathers.

They produce white eggs.
There are the Gold- Hen and Harco crosses.

Other new breeds are being introduced which carry trade names.

The animal husbandry centre can tell you which of them are suitable for your particular conditions.