Started By
Message

How young is too young to see turkeys be slaughtered?

Posted on 7/23/21 at 1:19 pm
Posted by TigerOnTheMountain
Higher Elevation
Member since Oct 2014
41773 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 1:19 pm
We’re going to slaughter and harvest our turkeys on Saturday and I want to bring my five year old along. My wife says too young.

What say you, OB? I’m not sure I want to make a stand over this, but five seems like an appropriate age to me for a child to find out where their food comes from.
Posted by mylsuhat
Mandeville, LA
Member since Mar 2008
48940 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 1:23 pm to
I killed my first deer at 6


Let them understand life early
Posted by Cypressknee
Member since Jul 2017
1195 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 1:24 pm to
Guess it depends on the kid and their upbringing. Mine has been with me at the camp since he was on the bottle. He’ll stand at the skinning rack while eating a snack watching me skin and break down a animal all the while asking questions. He’s about to be 4yo and when we eat sometimes he’ll ask if it’s hog, deer, squirrel etc etc. My son has already seen it all, been on hunts and watched me kill.
Posted by ChenierauTigre
Dreamland
Member since Dec 2007
34516 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 1:26 pm to
Did the child have a hand in raising them? Like petting, feeding, and naming. If so, that will be traumatic.

My brothers used to give me baby chickens or ducks at Easter. They would let me raise them, feed them, and become attached to them. Then they would slaughter them. I was horrified. I still have not forgiven them after 60 years. It was a betrayal to me and I will never forget it.
Posted by tigerinthebueche
Member since Oct 2010
36791 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 1:42 pm to
quote:

I’m not sure I want to make a stand over this,



You’ve answered your own question.

Bring em next year.
Posted by Rebnbama
East Alabama
Member since Jan 2014
121 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 1:43 pm to
Like the others have said - it depends on the kid. My son watched me kill and dress all sorts of game from the time he was potty trained. We never had livestock as "pets" so we didn't have to have that experience.

My wife and I never talked about it, but I knew when he was ready. He killed his first deer at age 7 if that helps.
Posted by bayoudude
Member since Dec 2007
24956 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 1:45 pm to
Never too young imo makes th more comfortable around slaughter and butchering to be exposed early
Posted by ccard257
Fort Worth, TX
Member since Oct 2012
1311 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 1:48 pm to
Unless these were some kind of pet and you weren't clear with the kid from the get go that this was the end game, then your wife is wrong. Now whether you want to make a stand is an entirely different conversation.
Posted by TigerBait1971
PTC GA
Member since Oct 2014
14865 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 1:59 pm to
quote:

then your wife is wrong


Like that ever matters.
Posted by upgrayedd
Lifting at Tobin's house
Member since Mar 2013
134861 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 2:06 pm to
Kids are pretty resilient when it comes to this kind of stuff. If you explain in pretty basic terms that this is what you have to do in order to have a turkey sandwich or a Thanksgiving spread, then they typically accept it fairly easily (an sometimes become even more interested).

However - happy wife, happy life.
Posted by DownSouthJukin
Coaching Changes Board
Member since Jan 2014
27256 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 2:30 pm to
I'll paraphrase something I read the other day that may be true for a lot of folks, and society in general, "The problem with boys these days is their mothers."

It probably holds true for most girls, too.

Take that for what it's worth.


Posted by AutoYes_Clown
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Oct 2012
5175 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 2:50 pm to
quote:

Did the child have a hand in raising them? Like petting, feeding, and naming. If so, that will be traumatic.


I remember when I was real young, my grand parents had chickens that we named after people in our family and we became attached to. I'll never forget when my 80lb sweet Grandma came out of the house, grabbed the chicken with my name and wrang (sp?) It's neck. Then plucked and processed. I think I grew up a bit that day, especially at the dinner table.

Posted by auggie
Opelika, Alabama
Member since Aug 2013
27956 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 3:12 pm to
It's probably pretty damn traumatic, if you're a young turkey.
Posted by awestruck
Member since Jan 2015
10941 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 3:29 pm to
Democratic turkeys or Republican turkeys?




Posted by ozktgr
North Arkansas
Member since Mar 2020
329 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 3:42 pm to
I was around that age when first exposed to wild game butchering. My nephew is 4 and he likes to pluck chickens.

Off topic: Do you raise your turkeys in a coop/pen or on pasture?
Posted by bobdylan
Cankton
Member since Aug 2018
1530 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 4:43 pm to
I’ve exposed mine to dead animals and processing them at home from day one so they don’t really know better. Deer and hogs hanging on their swing set. We also talk about where our food comes from and I make a bigger point if it’s something we caught or they watched me clean, etc.

Never been to a mass slaughter though - i think I’d bring them.
This post was edited on 7/23/21 at 4:46 pm
Posted by finchmeister08
Member since Mar 2011
35640 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 4:46 pm to
Posted by Clyde Tipton
Planet Earth
Member since Dec 2007
38735 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 5:04 pm to
quote:

What say you, OB?


It's too hot to slaughter anything right now without a climate controlled room.

Needs another 6 months... The turkeys and the 5 year old.
Posted by TigerOnTheMountain
Higher Elevation
Member since Oct 2014
41773 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 5:16 pm to
quote:

Do you raise your turkeys in a coop/pen or on pasture?


Both. They’re in a converted cow pen with about 45 chickens, but have access to one of our pastures.
Posted by TigerOnTheMountain
Higher Elevation
Member since Oct 2014
41773 posts
Posted on 7/23/21 at 5:18 pm to
quote:

Needs another 6 months... The turkeys and the 5 year old.


Those bastards are getting the chop tomorrow. They’re a nuisance

As far as the five year old goes, I took him down there shortly after posting this thread and told them that’s where our turkey sandwiches come from. I don’t think he cared, but he was distracted by the new chicks. I’m going to hold off and take a deer with him in the fall instead.
first pageprev pagePage 1 of 2Next pagelast page

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitterInstagram