Are the peas a commercial business? Just for show? Do the hens lay edible eggs?
I make money on the peafowl, but not a lot. The males each have roughly 200 feathers in their trains. Around 150 to 170 eye spot feathers and a combination of 30 of the T guard feathers and plume feathers. I sell those feathers mostly for $1.00 to $2.00 each. There's usually a few that can't be sold that get badly damaged or soiled, but the vast majority are sellable. I sell day old chicks for $60.00 each and probably should raise my prices, because I quickly sell out. Peafowl eggs often incubate poorly. Setting hens work better. Last year all the peafowl eggs that hatched for me, but 1, were hatched by silkie chicken hens. They incubate better some years than others. The most chicks I ever hatched in a year was 43.
We both like watching the peacocks. I like the cry they make, even though it vaguely sounds like a woman yelling for help. The put the peacock sound effect in lots of movies and TV shows in woods where there should not be any peacocks.
The eggs are perfectly edible. Except for a few species in New Guinea, all bird eggs are edible. Peacock is supposed to be good to eat. One Mexican customer of mine raised peafowl mostly just to eat. He preferred peafowl over chicken, but said it was similar.
In the Middle Ages in Europe, cooks would carefully skin a peacock, cook it and put the skin back on. Knights would then take an oath to perform some task on the peacock by placing their hand on it, reciting a pledge, pulling a feather out to wear and eating some meat.
Keith