The Maguire Farm
Home

 Aerial

 Barns

 Basement

 Bob

 Bugs

 Cats

 Chickens

 Cows

 Dogs

 Ducks

 Ferrets

 Fireplace

 Fish

 Found

 Goats

 Guinea Fowl

 Guinea Pig

 Herd

 Hogs

 Horses

 House

 John Deere

 Lizard

 Llamas

 Oak Tree

 Peafowl

 Pigs

 Pond

 Ponies

 Photos

 Rabbits

 Sheep

 Snake

 Springhouse

 Turkeys

 Upper Barn

 Videos

Horses with Amie
Horses with Amie

Love Puppies?
Love Puppies?

 

All About Turkeys


 

Type
A large North American bird (Meleagris gallopavo) that has ornamentally covered feathers and a bare wattled head and neck. There are wild turkeys, but they are also widely domesticated for food.

Temperament
When most people think of a turkey they think of Thanksgiving dinner. While most who raise turkeys raise them for eating, some keep turkeys as a pet. And some do both, keep some as a pet while eating the others. There are many different breeds of turkeys, however there are two varieties, domestic and wild. The wild turkey lives and breeds in the wild and some are kept as pets. It can fly and is said to be smarter than the domestic. The domestic turkey are the type eaten on thanksgiving and they cannot fly. The domestic and wild turkeys are physically different. Domestic turkeys are much larger than the wild turkeys. Wild turkeys have brown tipped tails, while the domestic is white. A wild turkey is much faster than the domestic turkey. The fastest wild turkey can run up to 35 mph, while a full grown domestic turkeys pace is a slow walk (females are a little faster because they weigh less than the male). Wild Turkeys have better eyesight and hearing than domestic turkeys. Only male turkeys gobble, female turkeys make a clucking sound but cannot gobble. Only the male turkey can fan his tail feathers, females cannot.

Size
Wild Turkeys (full grown)
Weight: Males 8-24 pounds (3.6-11 kg.), females 7-16 pounds (3.2-7.2 kg.)

Male domestic turkeys have been known to get as heavy as 86 pounds (40 kg.).

Domestic turkeys weigh about twice what a wild turkey weighs. Male Wild Turkeys grow to about four feet long, including the tail. Females grow to about three feet. A wild turkey can have a wings span up to 5 feet wide. Domestic turkeys are much heavier and larger than wild turkeys. Female domestic turkeys are a lot smaller than male domestic turkeys.

Housing
Domestic turkeys cannot fly and can be kept inside a fenced in yard, much like a fence that would keep in a dog or a goat. Wild turkeys on the other hand can fly very well. Unless you keep their wings clipped you need a totally enclosed cage. Two turkeys can be kept in a 90 square foot and at least 6 feet high area. However the more room you can give your turkey the better. If you have wild turkeys that can fly their enclosed cage should have chicken wire surrounding it on all sides and top with a wood frame with a stiff metal dog wire of about 3-4 feet tall along the bottom to keep out other animals and to keep the turkeys in. Wild turkeys should be provided with a roost. (no need for a roost with domestic turkeys as they cannot fly up on one). A shelter should be provided to shield the birds from the rain, wind, hail, sleet and snow. Whether it be a simple tarp covering the roosting area or an actual barn stall or small building. The best type of floor is a dirt floor. Hay can be provided as a ground cover. Cement can be cleaned well, however it is hard on the turkeys feet. A wood floor can get pretty messy as the loose poop sinks into the wood.

Clean-up
The turkey pen should be kept clean. Waste should be raked out and new dirt or hay put down every few days, depending on how many turkeys you keep in how large an area. The more turkeys you keep the more you will have to clean.

Grooming
Turkeys will take care of their own grooming needs. If you own wild turkeys and do not wish for them to fly away, their wings need to be clipped on a regular basis.

 

Feeding
Turkeys should be fed pellets as their main diet. You can buy fowl pellets at many farm and pet stores. In addition to the pellets they can also be fed fruits, and vegetables. Turkeys will eat some kinds of leaves, weeds, wild nuts, acorns, grass, grapes, kale, and all berries that humans will eat, Russian olive berries, dogwood tree berries, wild grapes, wine berries, sassafras tree berries, honeysuckle berries and even poison ivy berries. Turkeys will love it if you sprinkle oatmeal on top of their food. My turkeys even love to eat a chicken egg that is cracked on the ground. Wild turkeys also eat insects and small animals. To prevent blackhead disease and other parasites, newly hatched poults (baby turkeys) should be fed a medicated 28% Turkey Starter for the first 8 weeks. From 9 to 14 weeks they should be fed 20-21% Turkey Grower. Chick medicated starter can also be fed, however the turkey is better. You can find medicated feed at farm stores. Wild turkey poults under two months old prefer to eat bugs and some will not take to the turkey feed you buy at the farm store. You may have to feed them things such as crickets, mealworms, earthworms, spiders and beetles, which can be caught by hand or bought at pet stores or bait shops. Take caution when catching bugs by hand that they were not exposed to pesticides. For this reason it may be best to go with the bugs bought at the pet store. Domestic turkeys will usually take very well to the pellets and very young turkeys should be fed crushed pellets until they get big enough to handle the full pellet. They sell crumbed pellets at farm stores. If you plan on having your hens lay eggs they need extra calcium. Feeding crushed oyster shells is a great source of calcium. Turkeys need small rocks or grit for their gizzard to grind food, for example dirt, sand, egg shells or oyster shell. A gizzard is a part of a bird's stomach that contains these tiny stones. It helps them grind up food for digestion. Fresh water should always be provided either in some type of bowl or a poultry water dispenser which can be purchased at a farm store.

Exercise
Turkeys should be provided with enough space that they can take care of their own exercise needs.

Life Expectancy
The maximum recorded lifespan for a turkey in captivity is twelve years and four months. For turkeys living in the wild, the maximum is less than ten years, but the average life expectancy of a turkey, is males  just over 2 years and just over 3 years for females. Domestic male turkeys often grow too large and to heavy to carry their own weight after their first year. Domestic turkeys bred for food consumption were not bred to live over one year.

Health Problems
Prone to blackhead disease. Blackhead "disease" is actually a parasite. It is carried by chickens, who are not susceptible to it. It causes the turkeys to get yellow spotted and enlarged livers and is fatal to the turkey. Not all chickens are carriers of this parasite, however, some are. Domestic turkeys are too heavy to fly and the males usually get so large their legs cannot support their own weight.

   

 

Gestation
A male turkey is called a Tom or sometimes called a Gobbler, and a female turkey is called a Hen. In wild turkeys males and females can be told apart by the breast feathers. Males' breast feathers have black tips, females are brown. The domestic turkeys must be artificially bred, where as wild turkeys will breed on their own. For a wild turkey the breeding season is in March and April. To attract females, in both the wild and domestic turkey, the male will gobble and strut, fanning out his tail feathers. They gobble, grunt, and strut about shaking their feathers. This dance attracts the female for mating. Males breed with more than one female. While domestic turkeys cannot mate without human intervention, the male domestic turkeys still strut around trying to attract a female. The incubation period of a turkey egg is about 28 days. Nesting Period is mid-April through mid-June; peak hatch time is about mid-May. Wild turkeys will lay on 8-16 eggs at a time, 12 is the average. Baby turkeys are called poults. Wild turkey poults cannot fly until they are about 2 weeks old, (domestic turkeys cannot fly at all.

Origin
The name "Turkey" stems from the word "tuka" which means peacock in India. Wild Turkeys were around long before Europeans colonized America. Wild turkeys should not be confused with their cousins, domestic turkeys (the ones you eat for Thanksgiving). Wild turkeys can be found living wild in North America. They are the largest game birds found in this part of the world. Domestic turkeys can also be found throughout North American, however they are not find in the wild, they are raised by humans for food consumption. The turkey is one of the most popular birds in North American. It is said that Benjamin Franklin wanted to make the turkey the national symbol rather than the bald eagle.

Copyright Dog Breed Info Center® www.dogbreedinfo.com - Used with Permission

 

Turkeys 1 - 2 - 3

Turkey Info

Wally's Feed Bag Obsession

 
 
 

The Material contained herein may not be reproduced without the prior written approval of the author. (C) 2001-2008 All Rights Reserved