The dual-purpose breed is the chicken that sounds perfect in theory: one bird, two revenue streams, maximum resource utilization. The hen lays eggs. The cockerels become meat. The spent hens…
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The dual-purpose breed is the chicken that sounds perfect in theory: one bird, two revenue streams, maximum resource utilization. The hen lays eggs. The cockerels become meat. The spent hens…
The breed management guide is the most underused document in commercial layer farming. Most farmers receive it when they purchase day-old chicks, place it in a drawer, and retrieve it…
A layer poultry farm is a type of poultry farming focused on raising chickens specifically for egg production. These chickens, known as layers, are specially bred to produce a high…
Every commercial layer operation in West and Central Africa started somewhere smaller. The farmer with 5,000 birds producing 4,000+ eggs per day was once managing 200 birds in a backyard…
A multi-age layer farm is not a single operation. It is several concurrent production cycles at different stages — a flock at week 4 of rearing in House 1, a…
The spent hen is the last financial transaction in a layer production cycle. After 72 weeks of egg production, 504 days of feed cost, and a complete vaccination and health…
An egg is a commodity — until you make it something else. At XAF 110 (USD 0.18), it is interchangeable with every other egg on the market. At XAF 180…
The 18-week pre-laying period is the only phase of a layer production cycle where costs run continuously, and revenue is zero. Every other challenge in layer farming — disease, heat…
Revenue is not profit. This is the most important financial distinction in layer farming — and the one most consistently ignored when a farmer looks at XAF 42 million in…
A 1,000-bird layer farm is the entry point to commercial egg production. It is large enough to generate meaningful monthly cash flow — at 90% laying rate, it produces approximately…