Heel low:
Welcome
Very interesting read. You could probably turn it into a book
Glad to amuse you.
Thanks but already in book form and near 200 pages (10 entries a page) on sister site BYC in their family life segment (stories, pictures and updates). The wondrous times we live in...allow me to write many "books" and have them accessible to the masses...at the touch of a few buttons. Internet...websites ... these forums.
As mentioned, I wrote the ACD Profiles (done up & given to SPCA in Calgary to help the ACD surrendered high rates drop...learn about the breed BEFORE adopting one). This is how I devoted a whole website, my first website to the ACD!)...and I have also gone to a big box stationary store and made ten copies--phone book thick...cost me serious dough and some time to get completed...and these publications have no colour photos like I post on the Net. So was, I believe $30 a book and bound and all nice but truly...I can't afford the time and money to publish myself and I will not submit myself to all the bother finding some company that would in the end, edit my work and thereby not make it my own. I do not figure I am saleable in the raw...oh my eyes...nope, so I get to write and click and publish...without an editor (can you see the spelling errors the hilarious pop up because there is no one in the wings editing my drivel...barf!).
Dr. Carefoot did the same thing...had himself published thru a lady...he also did not want to be edited to make himself more saleable. I think the moment you take something that brings you & others JOY and submit it for someone to make money on...it loses something natural, free (duh) and joyously happy. Nope, no right proper BOOK...but several "books" in the bestest sense where all may access at will.
My BYC's Pear-A-Dice thread fast approaches 200 pages and is nigh two years old. July 30th, 2014...with over 28,000 views (lots of faithful readers and fans visit these posts--right from the start up too...along for the ride with me and mine) with over 5,500 images...colour photos cost you big time to have replicated for books...hee hee...costs Rick and I too for me to upload them on the Net but I suppose to share, nothing in life is for complete freeness...hee hee...best we keep our jobs, eh!
We love living the rural life and raising our own food. Also to exercise the opportunity to TEST what the big corps would have the masses believe. You know, corporations...and the lies they dish out, quite literally and so many are too lazy to put their claims to the test. The big lie I love to debunk is that somehow, the heritage food we raise ourselves compared to the modern commercial fare is not going to be of LESSER better quality...that somehow, someway, we with heritage breeds cannot compete with the "quality" of the factory farms (what a load of rubbish, eh!). For with the throngs of scientists and paid for studies...how could it EVER be possible that our old timer, antiquity heritage breeds could be BETTER than the scientific frankenmonstrosities humanity has put their supposed best minds on to. Commercializing the domestics...to be more efficient, better production, better at making MONEY. HA...root of most all evil IS money...nyuck nyuck!

Now I DO love science and the scientific method...to prove something is BEST by experiments to record RESULTS...so without further adieu, here's what I learned about raising my family's meat...happy good for all round all meat!
Turkey...
Great food...not just for special occasions but often that is what is done...we celebrate with a nice turkey bird!
Turkey Leader Fixins...Red ACD gal and her turkeys that figure SHE is their LEADER!
I raise a whole host of turkey reeds...nope, won't advocate that turkey's only come in varieties...I raise BREEDS separated from all the varieties because what would one do with the PALM (Ronquière) turkey when you have that turkey BREED and varieties like the Royal PALM...the Black & White PALM...the Red & White PALM, the Tri Colour (Red, Black & White) PALM...but I digress...as I so often do!
Chic and her BOWTIE!
She is a Desert Palm / Sweetgrass tricolour / Yellow-shouldered Ronquière -
Turkey Breed from 1566 - Antiquity Heritage Turkey
Tri-colour Palm Turkey hen with a bow tie (likely a skin tag that grows feathers...kewl, eh!). Her variety is tri-colour and her breed is Palm.
Off my lastest website...on the Turkey Page
Our Ronquière are black-winged bronze (b"1"/b"1"), grey (c"g"/c"g"), narragansett/royal palm pattern (n"g"/n"g"), and heterozgous for red (R/r). There are four colour varieties within the Ronquière breed: Black, Red and White (Desert Palms / Sweetgrass tricolour / Yellow-shouldered Ronquière - b"1"/b"1", c"g"/c"g", n"g"/n"g" and R/r), Black & White (Royal Palm BLACK patterned Ronquière jaspee - c"g"/c"g", R/-), Red & White (Royal Palm RED patterned Ronquière fauve - c"g"/c"g", r/r), & Rich red/chocolate patterned (Ronquière perdrix - assume grey is not being expressed?).
So the very first turkey I harvested...was for my son's wedding. A turkey tom and I smoked the breast meat and that was the center piece (besides the homemade fruitcake)...my first homegrown, my first smoked turkey white meat...turned out fine!
Now my fam loves a good turkey dinner...with all the fixings... And I got to pondering...hmmm...there seemed to be something that was bothering me about the heritage turkeys I was raising...perhaps, but not sure...there was suppose to be LESS white meat, less of the most choice cut on the heritage turkey as these were NOT Broad Breasted turkeys...when you used the differently shaped (more like the wild turkey form - long lived & healthy, disease resistant, able to forage for its own food, had legs to move, the chest was long and not round and bulgy, so the turkeys in the heritage form COULD replicate naturally...no artificial insemination...doing the
birds and bees things on their own without intervention)...so this comparison to the factory farmed BROAD BREASTED turkeys got to really bothering me...so...when something bothers me...I need to investigate it and figure it out.
One holiday dinner afternoon I was opening the can of jellied cranberries and it happened to slip outta me old fingers...I picked it up, upside down and laughed...ROARed so loud I am sure my son and spouse in the living room were too afraid to come down to the kitchen and question whether or not I had gotten deeply into the vanilla extract and was drunk on it...
"Open other end"...truly...the masses HAFTA be instructed that this bottom
won't easily be unleashed with a mere can opener?
So how many enraged phone calls does the company get where
the customer is furious because they cannot open their cans of cranberries?

I will not be like the masses that are like dead headed zombies missing the common sense they should have...and just accept what marketing gurus decide to stuff down our throats as the gospel truth! Inquiring minds want to know...so we go and we show ourselves some facts and the truth and we figure this out for ourselves. The truth shall set us free...eh!
Grocery store Commercial TOM next to homegrown Heritage HEN
So I had processed a Lilac turkey hen...had her in the freezer along with a store bought commercial tom turkey...factory farmed broad breasted turkey.
Commercial Tom weigh raw
The look of the shape is different between commercial and heritage turkeys...but the benefits of the different shape to the heritage is obvious!
So for the Canadian 2012 Thanksgiving dinner...it was TEST time. Who better to use as lab RATZ than my own family...
Heritage Hen on Left / Commercial Tom on Right
Note the richer colour of the heritage...not bleached white
This hen LIVED a true life...it shows in the darker (and firmer) meat
I weighed the raw products and I cooked the turkeys in the same oven beside each other...tried my very best to do the exact same to both so the results would not be skewed to benefit either.
Turkey Leg Visual Comparisons
Left Commercial Tom / Right Heritage Hen
Taste wise...the turkey leg of the heritage was more flavourful (happy meat, so natch!) and moister...my son who is the turkey leg fan says homegrown heritage was BEST compared to the commercial broadbreasted...easily! The meat held together better, the richness can easily be SEEN...strips of real tasty firm meat...not shredded crumbly less tasty mush...
Turkey Legs Cooked - Left Commercial Tom / Right Heritage Hen
So the biggest revelation was over the choice cut...the breast meat that is the very most coveted part of the TURKEY dinner...for most persons that...white meat is the premium cut in the turkey industry...like tenderloin or porterhouse--the
expensive meat portion of the animal.
Heritage Hen on Right / Commercial Tom on Left
The first thing you note, different shape and colour...the heritage hen's white meat is richer...to me it is obvious she lived the better life...she moved, chased bugs, squished mud between her toes, soaked up vit D as in sunshine and LIVED a happy full life...unlike the anemic pale looking commercial male did. Taste wise, better REAL flavour of turkey in the heritage hen. Admittedly, there are some people that do not LIKE the full bodied flavour of heritage birds that lead real lives (some hate REAL poultry eggs too...too much flavour, too firm and tasty...not watery mushish)...they want soft tofu like taste and for them, carry on with buying commercial mush meat ... by all means go with that you have learned to know and love I guess.
But for those of us that
remember what REAL poultry use to taste like and then would blame ourselves that our taste buds have gotten weak and we lost the ability to TASTE real food...by all means, try the heritage raised by your own hand happy meat. The flavour BURSTS outs...
So now for the real reveal...the REAL portion that makes me EVER so happy to raise our own foods...truly glad!
Heritage Hen left / Commercial Tom right
When I adjusted for the size of each bird (hen was smaller...she's a hen, hens are that way in the turkey world), and the amount of white boneless breast meat each bird produced (cooked identically at the same time in my oven)...
Commercial Tom - breast meat cooked
Heritage Hen - breast meat cooked
This is the joyous conclusion I came to...
So calculation time!
Beginning weights...
Raw heritage hen was 9.5 pounds (16 oz to the pound) = 152 ozs raw.
Raw commercial tom was 14 pounds = 224 ozs raw.
White meat...
Heritage hen one half was 15.35 ozs. so she had double that in boneless white meat, 30.7 ozs.
Commercial tom one half was 20.85 ozs. so he had double that in boneless white meat, 41.7 ozs.
Percentage White Meat...
Heritage Lilac Turkey Hen - raw weight of 152 oz. compared to 30.7 ozs white boneless breast meat = 20.18 percentage is WHITE MEAT.
Commercial Broad Breasted (HA!) Turkey Tom - raw weight of 224 oz. compared to 41.7 ozs boneless breast meat = 18.61 percentage is WHITE MEAT.
Heritage Lilac Hen had 20.18% choice white meat compared to Commercial Broad Breasted Tom had 18.61% choice white meat.
Heritage hen had 1.57% MORE choice white meat than Commercial tom.
The Heritage Hen had a higher percentage of BREAST MEAT than the Commercial Tom by 1.57%. I was ever so thrilled...what I had thought was going on, was going on...when put on equal terms, the heritage hen mopped up on the commercial tom.
Thanksgiving dinner - October 7, 2012
The heritage hen has more of the most choice cut...so much for the Broad Breasted (double muscled?) theory that the commercial farms and marketing forces had been lying to the masses about. Want better tasting turkey meat...grow your own heritage turkeys...by jove!

Not only do you free yourself from having to buy poults each year (self fertile...naturally) and get to be more self-sufficient, you get more of the choice meat, you get better turkey flavour and firmness, and you can do it yourself...how much pride is there in that you can lay down the celebration dinners that YOU had a personal hand in creating...from virtual start to finish (turkey help not ignored in they did the majority of the work by living, growing and giving their lives for our sustenance).
Christmas 2011 - pan gravy from a 16 month old Lilac Tom processed 25 pounds
Un-coloured gravy...that is the COLOUR of REAL turkey...
Another test I did was to compare a ten month old (around 9 months, heritage turks are ready to be processed for consumption)...and a sixteen month old tom. To see if the flavour improved...and yes, more turkey flavour in the older tom. So to me, who loves having my beasties and birdies around for a nice long time...I can honestly wait for them to be 16 months old and still process a breeding tom knowing HE had a lovely, enjoyable happy life for that long and he does not die at my hand as a waste...he has even more delicious turkey taste!

And yes, it is a tad tedious to process your own food...it takes someone to be able to stomach the kill, the defeather (I dry pluck...no wet dog, scalding, hot fleshed plucking for moi...DRY pluck...wonderful alternative to the other stenchy wet process), the gut, the chill for a few days in the fridge to tenderize (I process on Monday, we eat them on Sunday), we age beef and lamb...to let the meat settle--do the same for poultry please!
YES it costs WAY more to grow your own food but it is the better and in my opinion, more correct thing to do. It costs more for a premium product and I like to think of what the alternative would be...and the value placed on that. Thankfully there is a website where it costs one $249 US to get a 20 to 25 pound heritage turkey shipped to your door step (in 2015 pricing). So this makes me grin, ear to ear that every turkey bird that I process, to start off before I make them into dinner would have cost us $250 US to get to our door step! How's that for making you dance with joy...at the value it is to have it replaced by someone else...every turk dinner I create, before cooked has a value of $250 US ... now THAT is living high falooting, eh.
Another aspect when you raise your own meat past the fun of living day to day knowing what you eat is having a life...that you as a real meat eater ARE involved in the whole process...not just the food part is yours...the processing offers up values too past the shear eye candy of seeing the happiness in the flesh, bone and feathers by living amongst the birds & beasts.
Because we raise heritage turkey breeds & varieties...some of the turkey feathers are out of this world BEATUIFUL...how's that for a fist fulla gorgeous?
Not all toms...who has the EYE for the hen...Gerri the girl turk is drumming too? 
Black Bart & Louise
Royal (Black & White pattern / Ronquière jaspee) Palm pair...yeh, both genders KNOW howta strut their stuff!
So not only do I get to have fun raising our meat...I also have proven to myself and my fam...that the products WE choose to raise are by far and large BETTER, a premium product than what the factory farms produce. Happy meat, no artificial chemicals (NO antibiotics) to make mush meat taste like it should, we produce MORE of the better choice cuts...better flavour, firm happy meat taste that got to live the REAL life...better for all involved.
We LOVE

what we do and the love is what makes it all so much better!
Doggone & Chicken UP!
Tara Lee Higgins
Higgins Rat Ranch Conservation Farm, Alberta, Canada