Ilonggos and Negrenses are known widely
as the pioneers of scientific breeding and the fowls raised in these
parts and fowls coming from here are sold to all parts of the country
at prices higher than those locally grown there. We also have the
reputation of having the knack for selecting the better fighters and
this had added to a reputation of excellence among breeders big and
small.
Nelson and Rommel have no other means
of livelihood except raising game fowls. Being already well-versed on
the breeding aspect, they make sure that their breeders are well
selected and often, they come from known breeders or from their
buyers who want them to breed a certain type which they will
exclusively buy from him. And they don't simply take the word of
others when it comes to selection. They have their own set of
criteria developed through their long years of hands-on breeding.
Breeding for true to type individuals
and for performance.
Rommel on the other hand had been
supplied by his customers and friends with top rated brood materials.
“I would not like to divulge the friends and customers who provided
my brood stocks because they want it that way. They also have
exclusive right to my stags that is why every stock that I raise is
considered sold already. I cannot produce enough because it gets sold
anyway”, says Rommel. Both he and Nelson are still breeding this
off-season (May to September) because there are buyers who still buy
those late produce since cockfighting is non-stop especially in
Manila.
Game fowl raising as a way of life.
“Breeding game fowls have been my
main occupation since I got married from which I have raised my
family. My eldest son had graduated and is already on board a ship as
a sailor and I have high hopes that like the other seamen who had
prospered, he will also help us economically as he progresses in his
career. My second son is graduating from the Hotel and Restaurant
Management course. My youngest is still in the elementary grades.
With tuition fees and their daily school needs so expensive these
days I culd not have afforded their schooling had I just taken manual
labor which pays minimum wage”, says Nelson.
Everybody in the family helps. His wife
being very supportive tends to the incubator and the chicks that is
why they can hatch more than 500 each year and on a 50/50 ratio of
males to females, they can easily mature 250 or more stags or
cockerels every year. Nelson and his children tend to feeding and
other chores. We use only the best feeds available to other breeders
and feeders of game fowls. “We don't scrimp on feeds because it
shows on the health, size, height and conformation of the stags and
cocks we produce. Since cockfighting is competitive and there is only
one bottom line which is to win, our buyers demand value for their
money”.
Both Nelson and Rommel provide
employment indirectly to others in the neighborhood. Their tepees are
made by laborers who charge them P120.00 per unit and Rommel said
that the materials cost about P50-60 and the rest is labor for the
makers. A maker he said can make 5-6 units daily with some help,
often from their own children. They also need 500 or so tie cords
which they use to anchor the legs of their chickens. A tie cord costs
P8.00 per unit so between the two of us, we buy about P8,000 worth of
tie cords every year. A family making these can produce this in two
weeks' time and their cost of materials is just about P3,000 thus
making for them an income of about P5,000.00 in two weeks.
Game fowl breeding provides food
directly and indirectly. Indirectly, when the choice stags and cocks
are sold at a good price and used to buy rice and other food items.
Directly, when undersized and culls are slaughtered for the table.
Extra eggs are also eaten, often hard boiled and brought by the
children to school as snacks. “Our children are healthy and active
because they get to eat high levels of protein from chicken meat and
eggs”, says Rommel.
The game is now competitive. With two
major federations of breeders nationwide and an almost non-stop
competition, the demand for quality stags and cocks have increased.
We are often visited by buyers who say that they were referred by
their friends who have bought from us and want to buy the same types
as those bought in the previous years because they said that they saw
them win. We cannot refuse them and they just added to our list of
customers.
“We don't fight our roosters anymore.
Our buyers do it for us. We just sell and somehow these buyers come
back year after year because they are satisfied with the stocks they
bought. Since we also improve our breeds according to their
suggestions, they usually buy the new offspring where they had a hand
in selecting the brood stocks.
“This is our livelihood and our
passion. While some may say that this is gambling, for us this is
survival and our chance for a better life. We have not finished
school and we don't have other means to support our families. We
cannot leave this industry that has provided us with a decent life”,
both Rommel and Nelson concluded.
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