POULTRY SCARCE
-Press Assooiation.)
m » > Auckland Christmas Supplies HIGH PRICES INDICATED
(By Telegraph-
AUCKLAND, Oct. 22. Poultry for Christmas will be so scarce this year that already dealers are refusing to accept orders, and high prices will be commanded by the comparatively few birds that will be available. Cockerels and turkeys require to be killed and chilled months in advance for the Christmas market, at a time when they are carrying bloom condition, and suitable birds are difficult to obtain. High wheat prices have made poultrykeeping an unprofitable business for the small producer, on whom the market depends for stoeks. Increased overhead costs, apart from feeding birds, are said to have been responsible for causing such producers to turn to other means of livelihood, with serious results on poultry supplies. Large breeders concentrate on egg production for export. Destructiou of Chickens. The general adoption in Auckland, as well as in Christchurch and Dunedin, of the Japanese science of determining the sex of chicks at a day old, is another theory for the shortage, as advanced by . Mr. A. E. Knowles, president of the New Zealand Poultry Board. He explained yesterday that, whereas previously breeders had to raise chicks for Bome time before the sex could be discovered, practically all the cockerels that used to be marketed after this period were now destroyed within a few Hours of their birth. One breeder who set 20,000 eggs this year destroyed half that number when they proved to be cockerels. Previously, they would have been delivered for sale after some months. Extent of Increase Hens are obtainable in satisfactory numbers, but for chilling purposes they are not regarded a3 being as suitabla as cockerels. One of the largest Auckland poultry retailers said yesterday that he was not aware where he could Dbtain sufficient supplies of cockerels at present, and he would be willing to buy unlimited numbers at anything up to 10s each weighing around 51b. to 61b. The average bird now available weighed about 41b. and only exceptional ones were above that weight. Poultry prices last Christmas averaged 2s per lb., and the present rate is 2s 3d, which means that birds weighing up to 61b. sell to 13s 6d. However, indications point to higher prices for Christmas stocks. Turkeys realised to about 35s each last year, and the present shortage will increase their value to about £2. Even boiling fowls to-day are selling up to 7s each, twice the price obtained a year ago.
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Bibliographic details
Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Volume 81, Issue 27, 26 October 1937, Page 3
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413POULTRY SCARCE Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Volume 81, Issue 27, 26 October 1937, Page 3
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