Who wants to be a turkey milker?
Turkey milking and other great jobs -
I hear the pay is good....
but no way would I do it. :kooky:
Hat's off to the guys who can..
Finchaser is involved in the food business, he's got a lot of interesting stories. This is just one of them relating to the job of turkey milking.
What the heck is turkey milking? :huh:
Turkeys in captivity are prevented from breeding. They have to be kept apart or the hens will kill the toms.
So someone has to get out the juices from the tom to impregnate the hen with, hence the turkey milker job, a lucrative position where there are lots of job openings. I wonder why? :upck:
A first hand account from a blogsite:
[I have never done this, but saw an ad in a west virginia newspaper in the job section, looking to hire "Turkey Milkers".
Not being familiar with west va, or turkey culture, i asked my neighbor what a "Turkey Milker" did. As she explained it to me, a Tuurkey Milker picks up a 50-plus pound male turkey and stimulates it to ejaculation to collect sperm to inseminate female turkeys. I believed her, as her brother-in-law shortly was hired to perform this task. Sadly, he only lasted about a week....and that was at 15.00 an hour. Apparently his technique just ticked the turkeys off.]
[Turkeys used for breeding cannot mate naturally due to artificial growth rates. Male and female turkeys used for breeding are masturbated and artificially inseminated in order to obtain semen, which is driven into the female bird’s body. A “milker” at a ConAgra turkey breeding facility in Missouri described his job: “I have never done such hard, dirty, disgusting work in my life: 10 hours of pushing birds, grabbing birds, wrestling birds, jerking them upside down, pushing open their vents, dodging their panic-blown excrement and breathing the dust stirred up by terrified birds.”]