Chook. The Podcast

Chook Journal

Fresh, free-ranging conversations for backyard chicken keepers and serious breeders. Hosted by former foreign correspondent turned chicken breeder Jane Cowan. Accompanies the occasional magazine Chook Journal, fully digital and immersive storytelling available at chookjournal.com.au

  1. Permaculture Educator Joel Meadows on How to Dispatch a Chicken

    12/20/2025

    Permaculture Educator Joel Meadows on How to Dispatch a Chicken

    If we could avoid it, we probably would but dispatching a chicken is something every chicken breeder really needs to know as an unavoidable part of their repertoire. If you’re building a homesteader lifestyle, working towards sustainability or even if you’re keeping just a few chickens in your backyard it’s an indispensable skill. It can be tricky though to know how to get started. For permaculture educator Joel Meadows, who’s been keeping chickens for 30 years, it was about taking responsibility for both where his food comes from, and for the birds in his care. This is an honest and practical discussion that spans the gamut from the ethical underpinnings to the detail of three specific methods for dispatching a chicken. Truly there is noone better to have this conversation with than Joel —  respect for the bird is at the heart of his approach. We discuss: — Where chickens fit in permaculture systems from small, productive backyards to orchards and larger properties — Joel’s own first experience dispatching a chicken — Why he began offering workshops teaching others how to dispatch a chicken, how much demand there’s been and the range of people who’ve attended — The ethic and grounding in traditional cultures that underpins Joel’s perspective — The unavoidable truth that behind every laying hen there is a rooster that’s been killed — Benefits of knowing how to kill your own chickens versus eating chickens that have been factory-farmed and abattoir-slaughtered — The way in which chicken keepers are both carers and peak predators — The complicated calculation behind a decision to dispatch a chook — How the ability to dispatch your own chickens allows you to take control of where your food comes from, and extricate yourself from industrialised meat production — Grappling with the tension between loving your chickens and dispatching them — What might constitute “a good death” for a chicken — Why Joel asks participants in his workshops whether they’ve ever killed anything before — A description of 3 different methods for dispatching a chicken: 1. Axe 2. Neck break 3. Cone — Which method Joel prefers, which he thinks is fastest and best for the chicken and which is easiest for a beginner to successfully carry out — Downsides of each method — A fourth method using a broom handle for the neck break — What to expect including flapping, blood and convulsions and what is going on, to the best of our knowledge, when this happens — The cause of death associated with each method — Equipment needed for preparing a chicken for human consumption — How to pluck and eviscerate the carcass including water temperature and duration for dunking — How pasture-raised, heritage chicken meat compares to what you may be used to buying at the store e.g. red leg meat, yellow fat, flavour — Resting, brining and cooking heritage chicken meat — How to utilise all parts of the chicken’s body from blood to bones — Joel’s idea for a canvas/velcro device to hold a chicken, so a single person could swing the axe without needing a second pair of hands to hold the bird — Fasting chickens before dispatch — Skinning versus plucking — The value of dual-purpose breeds to provide both meat and eggs — Using chicken bones in compost — The insight dispatching your own birds provides into the health of your flock, what normal anatomy looks like and the influence of green pick and nutrition on body condition — The permaculture “oversell” of chickens vs the reality of keeping chickens in gardens as pest control — How Joel feeds and manages his birds including his feeding routine, rotation and the use of tree guards If this conversation helps you, please do leave us a review in your podcast app. In Apple Podcasts, just go to the show page, scroll to the bottom, look for the stars and you’ll see the option Write a Review. In Spotify too, you can leave us a comment. We really appreciate it.

    1h 10m
  2. Experienced UK Breeder Emma Middleton on Cream Legbar Genetics and Misinformation

    12/13/2025

    Experienced UK Breeder Emma Middleton on Cream Legbar Genetics and Misinformation

    The second in our series of conversations about Cream Legbars, the increasingly popular blue egg laying chicken.  This is a really illuminating conversation with the experienced British Cream Legbar breeder Emma Middleton. Emma knows more than anyone I’ve been able to find about the origins of the breed and more importantly the genetics behind the various traits that make this such a challenging and, as Emma says, “uniquely frustrating” bird to breed. Emma’s been able to answer questions I’ve had about Cream Legbars for a long time including exactly where the cream gene came from.  She clears up, too, some major misinformation circulating in Australia about how to properly select for and breed this variety including what colour chick down is correct: Over eight generations, Emma created Cream Legbars from scratch using the exact breeds that the variety’s creators, geneticists Reginald Punnett and Michael Pease did at Cambridge University in the early 1930s. She’s also crossed pure Cream Legbars back to Brown Leghorns to improve the bloodline. Emma explains in detail how to tell whether you actually have a Cream Legbar, as distinct from a Gold Legbar. Not to mention the confusion that silver can cause. Other topics include: Where Emma sourced her genetic information about Cream Legbars The problems in trying to fix faults in Cream Legbars by bringing in other people’s lines How many generations it took to get back to cream after outcrossing to Brown Leghorns The test mating process How long she’s found you can run a closed flock without encountering inbreeding depression Her experience with small egg size in Cream Legbars The lack of a fixed genetic base in most lines of Cream Legbars in its home country of the UK How many birds Emma typically bred per generation How she created cream, gold and silver Legbars from scratch using other breeds The exact steps she took in each generation How to tell a Cream Legbar from a Gold and a Silver, based on both chick down and adult feathering The significance of gold smudges in the wing triangle as a telltale sign of a bird that is not cream The role of autosomal red in Cream Legbars, male (chestnut) and female (salmon breast) Crest size Yellow leg colour

    1h 16m
  3. Poultry vet Dr Grant Richards on intestinal worms

    11/29/2025

    Poultry vet Dr Grant Richards on intestinal worms

    Worms are often the chief suspect when a backyard chicken gets sick. But how often are they to blame? This is the starting point for my conversation with poultry vet Grant Richards who has spent his 40-year career in chickens and chicken health. Grant sits at the helm of Parasite Diagnostic Services where you can send poultry manure for worm testing so you might think he’d be talking up the dangers posed by intestinal worms. But his perspective is a lot more nuanced than that.  We discuss: — How often worms are the culprit for sickness in backyard chickens — The importance of testing for worm loads before de-worming a chicken — Whether you should worm on a schedule — What is a healthy worm burden in a chicken — How chickens become “bombproof” against intestinal worms — The necessity of exposure to worms in order for a chicken to develop natural resistance — Understanding the parasite life cycle — How chickens get worms and the role of intermediate hosts — Why the mobile chicken tractor set-up is helpful in avoiding issues with worms  — How often to move your flock to fresh ground to avoid parasite problems — How sun, rain, frost and grass length affect parasite survival in the environment — How long to rest the ground before rotating your flock back there — Whether baby chicks can hatch with worms — The critical age for roundworm build-up in a chicken — Why not to google your bird’s symptoms — How long post-hatch it takes for a chick’s immune system to ‘fire up’  — Grant's take on diatomaceous earth — Whether you or your dogs can catch worms from your chickens — Whether Dr Richards thinks you should vaccinate your chickens — Whether it makes sense to cull your flock if mycoplasma is detected — The use of ivermectin-containing pour-on sheep and cattle drenches to control lice and worms in chickens

    54 min
  4. Incubation Masterclass with Brinsea Distributor and Incubator Extraordinaire Loi Truong

    11/09/2025

    Incubation Masterclass with Brinsea Distributor and Incubator Extraordinaire Loi Truong

    If you’ve ever needed help with or had a question about a Brinsea-brand incubator, Loi Truong is the man who will have come to your rescue. One of the loveliest and most helpful people working in chickens in Australia today, he holds the Brinsea distributorship in this country and has been incubating for decades. So I couldn’t think of anyone more qualified to talk about the ins and outs of incubating eggs at home. In this conversation we discuss everything from storing eggs prior to incubation and why we incubate at 37.5 degrees when hen body temperature is much higher to dry incubation, incubating posted eggs, what humidity Loi recommends for incubating Marans eggs with their extra coat of dark pigment on the shell and what to do if there’s a power outage during incubation. I also ask Loi to weigh in on the question that always sparks heated debate between egg sellers and buyers: can you tell whether an egg that doesn’t develop was fertilised by examining the yolk after it’s been incubated for five or ten days? Other topics include:  — How interest in incubation has changed over the years — The optimal age for putting an egg in the incubator — Loi's experience incubating refrigerated eggs — Horizontal vs vertical incubation — Why turning during incubation is important — The ideal turning interval — Malpositioned or “breeched” chicks — How long it takes after pipping for the chick to unzip — The worst time to attempt an assisted hatch — What hatch rate Loi gets from posted eggs vs eggs collected in person — The consequences of incorrect humidity during incubation — Candling to monitor air sac development — How much temperature can vary during incubation without killing the chick — The difference in setting temperature in still-air vs fan-forced incubators — Whether you should incubate at 38 degrees — How to correctly use an independent thermometer to check your incubator — Candling prior to incubation — “Sticky” chicks and “shrink wrapped” chicks — The danger of too-high humidity during hatching — The magic of broody hens — Whether incubation technique can in any way influence the sex of the chicks that hatch — Exploding eggs — Whether it’s okay to remove fluffed up chicks while others are still hatching — Using cheap incubators

    49 min
  5. Madelaine Scott: From "Egg Girl" to Successful Businesswoman

    11/01/2025

    Madelaine Scott: From "Egg Girl" to Successful Businesswoman

    From 20 chickens as a homeschooling project at the age of 8 to a million dollar business with 5000 chickens, certified organic. As the brains and the brawn behind Madelaine's Eggs, the broad strokes of Madelaine Scott’s story are well known to Australians.  She burst into the public eye as a 19-year-old launching a crowdfunding campaign that raised 60 thousand dollars in 60 days to purchase an egg-grading machine. In this conversation, now 31, Madelaine opens up about the day-to-day realities of running a free-range, organic operation including: — The financial realities and how much she pockets in profit, relative to turnover — How to care for chickens without worming and spraying them with chemicals — Exactly what feed and which supplements she gives her flock — The daily workload involved in running her free-range operation — How many staff she now has and her role these days — The organic certification process  — The prospect of H5N1 bird flu arriving in Australia and what it would mean for her operation — Vaccines for chickens — The phasing out of caged eggs in Australia — Diversifying into meat (turkeys, "spent" hens) as well as eggs — Plans for a micro-abattoir at Hollyburton Farm — The homesteader lifestyle You can check out Madelaine’s own chicken soup recipe in the Spring 2025 issue of Chook Journal, our fully digital, immersive magazine available now via the website chookjournal.com.au

    54 min
  6. Alf Woods, 98 years in chickens

    10/25/2025

    Alf Woods, 98 years in chickens

    Alf Woods is a singular figure within the Australian poultry community and someone who, in show circles, truly needs no introduction. He went to his first show at the age of 7 and, now 98, he’s been a fixture at the Melbourne Royal ever since. Having spent 9 decades in poultry, participating at just about every level of the fancy, it was a priceless opportunity to sit down with Alf and pick his brain. This conversation is jam packed with not only instruction in how to breed but anecdotes from a lifetime spent around chooks and chicken people. Alf discusses: — His method of single mating all his birds — The importance of ruthless culling to eliminate faults — His poultry "bible" aka stud book — How he feeds his birds — Some of the best reads from his enviable library of chicken books — The unique Japanese fowl known as the Onagadori — How he's never wormed a bird — His daily routine with his birds, at 98 — His advice to new breeders starting out — The perils of buying birds online — Eating chicken soup every night  — Brother-sister matings — The longest he's kept a line pure without outside blood — Why you should not have a feed hopper in your chook pen — Whether you should outcross to a male or female bird — Beetle green sheen versus purple — The fine line between show preparation and faking — Whether he's ever bred himself into a corner and had to abandon a line — How he trims rooster spurs — Memorable adventures from a lifetime in chickens

    49 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Fresh, free-ranging conversations for backyard chicken keepers and serious breeders. Hosted by former foreign correspondent turned chicken breeder Jane Cowan. Accompanies the occasional magazine Chook Journal, fully digital and immersive storytelling available at chookjournal.com.au