@Op: Just a general idea. This is only applicable if you can get your hands on the feed free of cost. The lower your everyday expenses ate, the higher the profit returns at the end of the year. And do not hire third party individuals to help you out. Involve your family, brother or some cousin. Lowers the cost even more, because you're not giving daily or monthly wages, which would amount to roughly anywhere from four thousand to eight thousand. Khair, lets get down to business. Also one more thing, you have to take advice from a vet before getting any animals. Get one male calf for eid, one or two goat kids for milk, roughly five or so goat kids for meat, ten, twenty chickens for desi eggs; and if you can, then a few pairs of rabbits for meat raising. And again if you can, pigeons for meat.
Now the goat kids would cost you roughly Rs. 1000 to Rs. 1500.
Calf for roughly Rs. 15,000
Chickens ready for laying eggs (roughly more than six months old): Rs. 400 - Rs. 450 or maybe even Rs. 500 per piece
Pigeon: Rs. 400 or so per piece, not pair.
Rabbit: same as above.
When you want to sell them is upto you but a goat is ready to be eaten anytime but wait till ten months and then start looking for buyers. Do not put your hopes on selling at eid time. The market is saturated, prices are nearly the same everywhere. So its not worth going up against the big boys. Think small, start small, earn small but do all of this consistently.
Again calf can be eaten anytime but after a year of good feeding it can easily fetch Rs. 30,000 - Rs. 50,000 and after two years, if he's in exceptionally good health, shiny coat, muscular, with a lump of fat, then Rs. 80,000+ Find pathans to sell this beauty to. And if possible instead of goats, get sheep, make friends with pathan hotels and request each one of them to buy at least one animal from you.
You can sell the chicken eggs or use them at home, seeing how winters are coming it would do you good. Or collect them and place them in fridge or in a cool dry place, so that they do not go bad. And then use them for raising more chickens. You do know how costly a desi chicken is compared to a broiler, shed raised chicken.
Pigeons are to be eaten within a month and a half of hatching, provided they have been well fed. And rabbits after three months. Now both these items are a bit luxury, exotic, I know. But that doesnt mean they are not consumed by the common man, they are. You just have to find the target market. Or let the people know what you are raising, and the rest will be taken care of by God.
Ah yes, keep the pigeons locked up for a few weeks with their flying feathers pulled out until they get used to their new place. And for the rabbits dig a three foot or so trench, line it with concrete. Make it at least five to six or seven feet wide. Then put a five feet r so high cage above it. Fill the concrete hole with the excavated sand and then let them multiply.
Now the cost part you will have to work out yourself because every region's got different set of price mechanisms. One thing to remember, with your budget is not to look for a high amount of profit. If you want to start, start slow and invest slower. Once you've handed over the money its gone. Its not yours anymore, so better be sure this is what yo want to do and can do easily. The key thing to remember, 'easily' if its a problem, then leave. Find something else.