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SeaboltFamilyFarm OP t1_j1ngq1r wrote

I completely understand but being chickens they are fed a non GMO and organic grain (not grass fed) and it's roughly 28$ a bag so doing the quick math of 500 birds is 1,572$+1/4lb feed per day per bird is 125lbs per day ×6weeks is roughly 5,250lbs ÷ 50 = 2940$ + average cost of water and a 10% loss (which is standard for chickens due to predators and a fast growing chicken raised outside) then my labor of raising the chicks which is roughly 2 hours a day then butchering day which I offer for free is around 6 hours per 100birds so hours of labor and care is 139.

1,572+2940+50 =$4562 total cost

500birds - 10% = 450birds

450birds × 25$ = $11,250

11,250 - 4,562 = 6,688

6,688 - 4562 = 2126

Profit is 2,126 labor hours 139 $per hour =15.29

I'm not getting rich by any means!

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the_honeyman t1_j1nimc0 wrote

What brand of feed are you using?

Edit: also, you're feeding that much on pasture based poultry? Do you not have enough room for them to forage when it's warm? That sounds high for "free-range" chickens. Not in quotes because I'm making fun of you, just hate the term free-range.

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SeaboltFamilyFarm OP t1_j1nj0pt wrote

Nature's best but currently working with a local mill to find a more local option for feed that can hopefully reduce cost!

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the_honeyman t1_j1nj4d1 wrote

Damn yea there's the place to cut more costs. Also I edited that comment above, just so you know.

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SeaboltFamilyFarm OP t1_j1njx40 wrote

Also if you send me an email I can send pictures of the process in which the birds are raised and go more into detail of how it works!

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the_honeyman t1_j1ococq wrote

I'm pretty familiar. My whole family are/have been farmers. I admire the dedication to the grind.

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SeaboltFamilyFarm OP t1_j1njrve wrote

Yes but when living in Tyson and Georges country finding a local option trustworthy is the hard part but these chickens aren't exactly free range they're raised in a Chicken tractor 12'×12' to help with predator loss and to control where they go on pasture this breed of chicken is lazy and lethargic but it produces the most meat the fastest due to genetics and breed so it's the most cost worthy option for an 8 week grow time most other birds would be half the size in double the time so the outdoor Chicken tractor allows protection exercise sunlight bugs fresh grass we rotate 6 tractors with around 84 birds in each one moved across the pasture 2x per day

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GrannyLow t1_j1o6jqm wrote

So your gross sales on 450 birds is $11,250 and your expenses are $4,562

That makes your net $6,688. Why did you subtract your cost from that a second time?

I am getting $6,668 / 139 hours = $48 per hour

Of course that's ignoring taxes and your overhead for the land and all that. I'm just trying to get a feel for the numbers you are putting out there.

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SeaboltFamilyFarm OP t1_j1o6os6 wrote

Because after selling 500 birds you have to buy them again to sell again

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GrannyLow t1_j1o86wo wrote

Which will then gross you another $11,250 which will cost you $0 because you already accounted for that expense with the last batch?

That's not really how that math works.

This is going to sound a little ass-hole ish but I don't mean it that way. If you are going to try to make a living like this you really need to get a better handle on the numbers. A lot of small businesses fail only because they suck at keeping books.

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SeaboltFamilyFarm OP t1_j1o9263 wrote

Well you're wrong though? I have to buy the feed in bulk for the next batch then I have to purchase the chickens? I accounted for the original birds and then the next batch? When you buy an animal that doesn't reproduce you have to make the purchase again? Which comes from the profit of the last batch?

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GrannyLow t1_j1ockc4 wrote

Batch A revenue - batch A expenses = batch A profit

Batch B revenue - batch B expenses = batch B profit

You accounted for both batch A and batch B expenses in batch A, which is fine, but you can't account for batch B expenses again in batch B profits. So batch B profit is now the full $11,250. Otherwise you are double dipping.

In other words you are subtracting the cost of 1,000 birds from the revenue from 500 birds.

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SeaboltFamilyFarm OP t1_j1oe036 wrote

Yes, but as you mentioned I went over most cost I didn't add in maintenance, I also didn't add in help butchering, brooder costs and electric also bedding costs I just did quick math to show that I'm not making millions but yes batch 2 makes almost double what I bring in on batch 1 and batch 3 all the kinks are worked out for the year and the weather can be better if it's not super wet or super dry lol there are a lot of variables that can't be accounted for but batch 1 doesn't make much, batch 2 makes a little and batch 3 generally sets us up to make much needed improvements, update equipment, maybe someday expand or hire some help so yes there is money being generated but 99% goes towards the farm and making it better like I said not getting rich but expanding is always happening like I mentioned we want goats for kids and dairy, we want more egg layers, we want more pigs, we want better buildings equipment and one day I'd like to quit my off the farm job that subsidized the farm and just farm but in order to do these things money has to be made and I have to work really hard at producing the best products I can and sell them to people like you but as of right now off the farm I make 45k and on the farm I break even with updates and buying and selling animals to make my dream come true of having a regenerative and prosperous farm!

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the_honeyman t1_j1od1zg wrote

You're still double counting the expense of buying the new birds.

I knew something was off with your numbers, but I couldn't quite place it (and frankly didn't care enough to try earlier). They're fine for the initial batch, if you want to count the expense for the next batch in with the first, you can't then take it out of the next as well.

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