Farm Futures
   Search Site:  Search Site Wednesday, May 22, 2013 | Bookmark This Site   
Skip Navigation Links
Home
Markets
News
Weather
Farm Futures NOW!
Magazine Online
RSS News
Mobile
Subscribe
Reprints
Register
Login
About Us
Advertise
 
  • Post to Your Wall.
 

Fun Turkey Facts For Thanksgiving

There's a lot more to our tasty friend than being the main attraction at our nation's only official feast day.
Compiled by staff 
Published: Nov 24, 2011

Happy Thanksgiving. Here’s a list of turkey facts, you might find of interest.

•    Ben Franklin, in a letter to his daughter, proposed the turkey as the official United States bird.

•    In 2000, the average American ate 17.75 pounds of turkey.

•    The heaviest turkey ever raised was 86 pounds, about the size of a large dog.

•    A 15 pound turkey usually has about 70% white meat and 30% dark meat.

•    The male turkey is called a tom.

•    The female turkey is called a hen.

•    The turkey was domesticated in Mexico and brought to Europe in the 16th century.

•    Wild turkeys can fly for short distances up to 55 miles per hour.

•    Wild turkeys can run 20 miles per hour.

•    Turkeys’ heads change colors when they become excited.

•    Most of the turkeys raised for commercial production are White Hollands.

•    It takes 75-80 pounds of feed to raise a 30 pound tom turkey.

•    A domesticated male turkey can reach a weight of 30 pounds within 18 weeks after hatching.

•    Forty-five million turkeys are eaten each Thanksgiving.

•    Twenty-two million turkeys are eaten each Christmas.

•    Nineteen million turkeys are eaten each Easter.

•    Male turkeys gobble. Hens do not. They make a clicking noise.

•    Turkeys have heart attacks. The United States Air Force was doing test runs and breaking the sound barrier. Nearby turkeys dropped dead with heart attacks.

•    The five most popular ways to serve leftover turkey is as a sandwich, stew or soup, salad, casserole and stir-fry.

Have a great Thanksgiving!



Permalink: Click here

Comments
Read comments from others and share your own thoughts.
Please provide the answer to the following question:

 = 
 
Search this site:   

Read More Stories
Sugar Policy, SNAP Key Points of Farm Bill Debate Day Two
Read this storySenators debated sugar policy and voted on controversial SNAP amendments Tuesday
Read this story

U.S. Geological Survey Finds Groundwater Levels Shrinking
Read this storyLatest study on long-term aquifer water levels finds accelerating draw-down
Read this story

American Farm Bureau Opens Annual Photo Contest
Read this storyAFBF photo contest continues through October 15
Read this story

   
Morning Market Review by Bryce Knorr
Afternoon Recap by Paul Burgener
Weekly Fertilizer Review
Sugar Policy, SNAP Key Points of Farm Bill Debate Day Two
U.S. Geological Survey Finds Groundwater Levels Shrinking
Livestock Call by John Otte
The Buzz: Late Planting Still An Issue
Senate Begins Consideration of 2013 Farm Bill
American Farm Bureau Opens Annual Photo Contest
Weekly Soybean Review
Top 50 Tags
2008 farm bill 4-H American Farm Bureau Federation American Soybean Association animal health biofuel biofuels BSE checkoff Corn Belt crop insurance department of agriculture Drought dryland Environmental Protection Agency EPA extension service farm bill Farm Bureau farm programs farm progress farm progress show Farm Service Agency farm show farmprogress farmprogress.com farmprogressshow farmprogressshow.com FDA FFA Food and Drug Administration free trade agreement hay expo House Agriculture Committee husker harvest Husker Harvest Days huskerharvestdays.com livestock livestock producers National Cattlemen's Beef Association National Corn Growers Association NCGA New York Farm Show Progress show Senate Agriculture Committee soybean association the farm bill usda winter wheat www.farmprogress.com