Farm rife with lucky gobblers

Rafter of turkeys living the sweet life in Greene County

— A gaggle of Greene County turkeys doesn’t know how lucky they are, regardless of Thanksgiving.

No, they have not received a pardon from the governor or the president. Instead, they have been raised as pets by Lisa Gipson on her farm outside Paragould.

“[My sister] brought two turkeys for pets,” Gipson said. “I just thought they were so pretty.”

But finding a breed that was special was a challenge, she said.

“I looked on the Internet and just couldn’t find [royal palm] turkeys,” Gipson said, explaining that the turkeys were white-feathered turkeys with black tips that nearly became extinct in the 1920s.

“So I ordered them from a hatchery in Missouri.”

Gipson said she had originally ordered 16 turkeys to raise as pets, though four of them died.

“At 6 months old, I still have 12,” Gipson said.

Her husband, David, said he gave the turkeys unique names associated with various holidays, including Thanksgiving and Christmas.

“We’ve named themPresidents Day, Martin Luther King Day, Fourth of July, all [holiday] names pretty much,” he said. “I’ve got them all named.”

Gipson said while she was raising the turkeys as pets, not all would necessarily receive amnesty. Some of the birds would be sold and their fates unknown.

“I had a guy insist on buying one Saturday,” Gipson said. “So I sold it for $30. A full-grown turkey normally sells for $40.”

Three other turkeys would be sold as well, Gipson told the Paragould Daily Press.

“I’m going to take three to the Ward livestock auction because they’re fighting,” she said, adding that many times the male turkeys to be sold were attempting to show their dominance and were becoming a nuisance to the other animals.

David Gipson said if the other turkeys misbehaved, they have been warned of the consequences.

“That’s my threat [to eat them],” he said with a chuckle.

Gipson’s husband said normally the turkeys were not bought for food consumption at $40 a turkey, though.

“Wal-Mart is cheaper and closer,” he said.

Should the turkeys be slaughtered or die of other causes, Gipson said she had found a way to make money from the traditional holiday bird.

“There is a market for their feathers with Native Americans,” she said. “One site online will buy their feathers for $39.99 per dozen.”

But Gipson said she was really just in the business of raising the turkeys as pets with her other animals.

“We have 12 turkeys and 14 goats,” Gipson said. “My husband raises Nubian-Alpine goats. And we have five chickens.”

Gipson said she and her husband even had a catfish pond on the back of their property west of Paragould. But farming and raising the turkeys as pets has been her focus since purchasing the birds six months ago.

“You can eat them and they are edible,” Gipson said. “But people get them for pets. And [for us], it’s really just a hobby.”

Arkansas, Pages 18 on 11/22/2012

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