Growing chickens is like any other business. "Profit" "loss" and "Overhead" are all very real. If a few dogs get in with your chickens and kill half of them, not very profitable, because you have a loss. If you hatch your own eggs, perhaps, you have a poor hatch. You have the price of feed, housing, water, waste removal, marketing and medications to contend with. The profit margin for commercial types of chickens is low, maybe 25 cents a bird. Its not a easy business, and there are many, many things that can set you back and cause losses that are hard to recover from. No walk in the park, but if managed correctly, yes one can make a decent profit.
a chicken will reach near full size in 20 to 22 weeks unlike production barns were a bird will hit full size in 6 to 8 weeks
The practice of slavery made the growing of cash crops profitable in the South. It was decades after slavery that mechanization made it extremely profitable again.
Growing cotton is profitable. Depending on the size of the cotton crop, farmers can make over a hundred thousand dollars in a season.
Highly profitable. It is a common source of extra income for farmers in some areas of rural Brazil.
Sell your eggs. killing them is mean. that is why I'm a vegietarian!
Tobacco was Virginia's first profitable export.
From growing vegetables and fruits. From raising cattle, chickens, turkeys, and pigs.
hey were grown in germany but came from chickens feathers
1) pigs 2) cows 3)chickens 4) lambs 5 ) ducks/geese
Quebec was made into a profitable colony by Charles Darwin whose theory could explain why there were so many trees growing there and why the could be sold for such a good price.
No it isn't. The most profitable commodity traded by Virginia colonists was tobacco. So profitable was it, that Virginia started to worry about having enough farmers growing food rather than tobacco.
Generally, yes
yes it can have two yolks.but it will die if they starting growing into a chic them selves.