Abattoirs may decapitate unconscious birds if they wish to be certain both carotid arteries and both jugular veins are severed. Decapitation is the preferred bleeding method if a shackle line becomes inaccessible after neck cutting, because once a bird’s brain (head) becomes detached from its body, operators do not need to be concerned for the welfare of the body. After decapitation, immediate mechanical maceration of the head will ensure a rapid brain death.
If decapitation is not the preferred method of bleeding, then operators must perform a deep, transverse cut across the throat, close to the head. This is called a complete ventral neck cut (VNC) (Figure 17a) and is a very successful way to achieve severance of both common carotid arteries and both external jugular veins. Two methods of performing a manual ventral neck cut, depending on how much time is available to the slaughterperson, are described below. Both methods are suitable for any species of poultry, although Method A may be particularly suitable for larger birds such as turkeys (it may make it easier to sever their carotid arteries which lie deep within the neck muscle). Assuming you are the slaughterperson:
Figure 17. How to manually restrain a bird's head and apply a ventral neck cut. Restrain the head using any of the grasps shown. b) relates to Method A: 4) push the knife through the middle of the neck in a straight line so it emerges out the other side; 5) then pull the knife through the tissues of the throat. Whichever of the suggested methods is used, after cutting, the throat should look like that of the bird held in c): the neck muscle and sides of the throat are visibly cut. (Consider wearing suitable personal protective equipment, eg chain mail glove.)
Immediately after performing the neck cut, the slaughterperson must look for two thin ‘jets’ of blood spraying under high pressure (Figure 18) – this indicates both common carotid arteries have been severed. Slow-flowing or dripping blood immediately after cutting may indicate the jugular veins are cut but the carotid arteries may still be intact so the bird should be cut again. No, or very limited, blood flow after cutting also suggests an ineffective cut, even in small species, eg quail; immediately perform the cut again, until sufficient blood flows.
Figure 18. A stunned turkey that has received a ventral neck cut. The turkey’s two common carotid arteries have been successfully severed, as indicated by the upside-down V-shaped pattern of blood flowing from the arteries which are embedded within the neck muscle. The high-pressure arterial flow typically subsides five to 10 seconds after neck cutting. It should be simple for slaughterpersons to self-check their neck cutting efficacy by checking that each bird displays this pattern of high-pressure blood-loss. Limited, or only dripping, blood flow may suggest the carotid arteries remain intact and the cut should be immediately performed again to prevent any possibility of recovery.
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