Views: 45664 Author: Phoenix Publish Time: 2023-06-01 Origin: Phoenix Breeding Equipment
Are you an up-and-coming farmer looking to generate a sustainable income? Chickens might be the best option for you. Not only are chickens great multipurpose animals, being a great source of eggs, meat, and fertiliser, they are also fast growing and provide an income quickly.
It might be a great time to enter the industry: 2020 also saw the introduction of a new poultry sector masterplan for the country, announced by the department of trade and industry. It aims to stimulate local demand, boost exports and protect the domestic chicken industry.
These facts may be enough to convince you to finally take the plunge and start farming with chickens. If so, you’re in luck, because we’ve compiled a list of the things you should know if you want to start your own chicken farm this year.
Also read: How do you automate a poultry farm?

1. Starting out
If you’re a small-scale producer interested in starting your own poultry business, it’s important to decide which sector of the industry you want to serve. This will determine how you go about setting up a business and making money.
There are two options for entering the poultry business: One is to hatch and sell day-old chicks to the big producers, a second is to buy day-old chicks yourself and grow them, selling their eggs or the chickens themselves as fully-grown chickens.
2. Find a market
“The first advice I would give someone who is just starting would be to make sure that they have a market for (the chickens or eggs),” says Masimbonge Vuma, owner of Indyebo-Agricultural Co-operative. “Before worrying about what type of breed to farm, housing equipment, and the amount of capital they need there must be a market.”
Even if you know nothing about formal market research practices, you can do your own research by setting out to learn more about your potential customers and distribution channels.
Read more: what equipment should be needed for raising chickens?
3. Chickens for eggs or chickens for meat?
“Poultry farming is a wide industry, so a person must decide if he wants to farm broilers (meat production) or layers (egg production),” says Vuma. “Or both if they have enough resources.”
“It’s important to choose the correct chicken breed for the market you have identified,” says Manyano Rasmeni, owner of Rasmeni’s Farming. “There’s layer chickens and there are broiler chickens, for eggs and meat respectively.”
4. Building a chicken coop
A good chicken coop should give your chickens a comfortable and healthy environment that is secure and clean and has enough space for all the chickens. The chicken house should also be well-ventilated to discourage the occurrence of disease among your chickens.
Anything that disrupts the comfort of the chickens in the poultry house will significantly impact the feed intake which subsequently affects the egg production and the weight gain for chickens that are raised for meat.
5. Feed
“Feed is the one factor that every poultry farmer complains about,” says Rasmeni. “Because feed takes about 60 to 70% of your operational costs.”
This means that minimising the cost of operations by reducing the feed is your best option of increasing profits. Rasmeni advises you to buy directly from suppliers and manufacturers to avoid agents’ mark-ups.
When you decide on the number of chicks you want to start with, make sure that you know how much and the type of feed that is required for them.
6. Equipment
“You must make sure there are enough feeders and drinkers inside the chicken coop,” says Vuma. “On the farm we make sure that there are 12 birds per nipple drinker, and 45 birds per pan feeder.”

For bedding you can use wood shavings, dry saw dust or chopped straw.
If you want more tips on building a chicken coop, and the basic equipment you need, click here for more information
7. Disease management
Disease management is a great challenge for small-scale farmers, because it results in poultry not performing optimally, eventually driving up costs and negatively affecting your earnings.
Birds that are sick or recovering from a disease generally eat less and produce less meat or eggs. Some diseases can be treated, which adds to cost of production, but in extreme cases, whole flocks might have to be culled to eradicate a disease. Dead chicks should be removed and buried in a hole in the ground. Sick and weak chicks should be kept separately and given special care.
“Prevention is better than cure,” says Rasmeni. “Chickens have different stages where you need to give them vaccinations against viruses and diseases to protect them.”
8. Marketing your chickens and eggs
“This is the most important section when you are done raising your broilers,” says Vuma. “When it is time to sell them, it will be alive per bird or on a weight basis.”
If you sell through a middleman you will lose some profit. Otherwise you will have to dress, pluck and eviscerate the chicken yourself if you don’t sell to an abattoir for processing.
“This is time consuming, but worth it,” says Vuma.

If you are looking for quality poultry breeding equipment visit PHOENIX - they will cater to all your poultry farming needs.
For more poultry equipment products visit our directory.
Phoenix Breeding Equipment Co., Ltd is a professional manufacturer and exporter that is concerned with the design, development and production of livestock breeding equipment. which can provide all kinds of poultry farm equipment, such as automatic feeding and drinking line, poultry nipple drinker, rabbit nipple drinker, poultry feeder, poultry drinkier, ventilation fan. Cooling pad , egg incubator,pvc pipe ,ss pipe etc. Check out our site to find the latest in poultry equipment. We hope you’ll fine the right products for you,, and how it allows you to scale up to the next level when you’re ready.
Whatsapp/Wechat:+86 18233772617
Skype:sophia52090
Email:linda@goldphoenixa.com
This article focuses on various types of poultry feeder equipment for modern poultry farming, covering automatic poultry feeder, poultry feeder pan and chick turbo poultry feeder. It elaborates their unique feeding functions for different poultry growth stages, explains how professional poultry feeder devices improve feeding accuracy, reduce feeding waste and realize standardized automatic feeding. It also introduces scientific poultry feeder maintenance methods to stabilize feeding performance, helping poultry farms optimize overall feeding efficiency and achieve cost-effective feeding management.
This article focuses on professional poultry feeding line equipment for modern intensive poultry farming. It comprehensively explains the scientific layout and operating principles of automatic feeding line systems, detailing the core functions and matching methods of key equipment including chicken feeder pipe, poultry feeder pan, chick turbo feeder, and automatic chicken feeder. The content elaborates how complete poultry feeding line equipment adapts to full-cycle feeding of young chicks and adult poultry, effectively reducing feed waste, avoiding feed contamination, and lowering labor and breeding costs. It also summarizes practical daily maintenance techniques for poultry feeding line equipment, helping large-scale poultry farms stabilize automatic feeding operation, improve flock health, and enhance overall breeding efficiency.
This article provides a comprehensive guide to professional poultry feeding line equipment for modern and backyard poultry farming. It breaks down the core components of the automatic feeding system, including the main feeding line, durable chicken feeder pipe, standard poultry feeder pan, dedicated chick turbo feeder, and intelligent automatic chicken feeder. It elaborates the unique functions of each accessory, explains how matched poultry feeding line equipment solves common breeding pain points such as feed waste and contamination, and highlights the advantages of full-automatic feeding in saving labor, improving feed utilization, and supporting full-cycle feeding for chicks and adult chickens. The article also shares practical daily maintenance methods for feeding line systems and accessories, helping poultry farms stabilize the operation of automatic chicken feeder equipment, reduce breeding costs, and achieve efficient and hygienic poultry feeding management.
This article focuses on performance optimization of poultry drinking line and chicken drinking line for modern poultry farms. It illustrates how nipple drinker quality affects the overall operation effect of the farm water line, and compares the functional differences between ordinary nipple drinkers and upgraded nipple drinker with cup. It highlights the core strengths of equipping poultry drinking line with nipple drinker with cup, including effective water saving, dry and hygienic coop environment, full-cycle poultry adaptability and stable water line operation. The article also provides standardized specification matching, installation layout and daily maintenance guidelines for water line systems, and summarizes the long-term economic and breeding benefits of optimized chicken drinking line equipment. It offers practical guidance for all-scale poultry farms to upgrade and stabilize automatic watering systems.