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What do you feed your meat bird chicks?

post #1 of 8
Thread Starter 
I have a dilemma! I cannot find Nutrena meat bird feed anywhere in the tricounty area. Nutrena is the only thing I will feed my birds because I have been very happy with their product. So I bought a bag of Nutrena All Flock- but it says I can't start feeding it to the meat birds until they are 7 weeks old. What do I feed them the first 7 weeks? I need your help since the babies are coming tomorrow or Monday!

Proud owner of 1 gold star chicken, 1 rhode island red chicken, 3 Columbian Wyandottes, 2 Buff Orpingtons, 5 Easter Eggers, 3 Speckled Sussex, 3 Welsummers, 3 Blue Andalusians, 3 Black Australorps, a black lab, a red tabby cat, and a ragdoll cat! Follow me at- http://raisingyourown.blogspot.com/ (updated 8/25)

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Proud owner of 1 gold star chicken, 1 rhode island red chicken, 3 Columbian Wyandottes, 2 Buff Orpingtons, 5 Easter Eggers, 3 Speckled Sussex, 3 Welsummers, 3 Blue Andalusians, 3 Black Australorps, a black lab, a red tabby cat, and a ragdoll cat! Follow me at- http://raisingyourown.blogspot.com/ (updated 8/25)

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post #2 of 8

Do you not have any local feed mills? What is the percentage of the flock raiser? I know alot of people that start their meat birds on a 20% flock raiser and keep them on that the entire time and don't have any problems. If that is all you have available then they should be fine til you can find a different feed. Sorry to say but eventually you might have to find a different brand to feed your meat birds, if they don't carry just a basic chick starter, but meat birds really do need a higher protein percentage than egg layers.. Some people on here use meal worms to up the % of protein... Hope this helps

I did a little search for you based on the location under your avatar and this is the closest feed mill i could find.. you can give them a call and see what they carry and if they don't have it, maybe they can direct you to where you need to go. I buy my feed from a local feed mill and it is the best quality feed in the area, free of hormones, antibiotics, pesticides, and ruminant meat and bone meal. Hopefully you can find a quality feed in your area.

Grasston Co-Op Feed Mill

 

209 Oak Street, Grasston, MN 55030

 

(320) 396-2497

 


Edited by jessicayarno - 2/18/12 at 9:02am
5 kids, 1 Doberman, 1 mini dauchund, 1 min pin, 2 cats, 3 black australorps, 5 black sex links, 11 barred rocks, 6 buff orpingtons, 2 white leghorns, 4 EE, 5 New hampshire reds,  1 black austrolorp rooster, 1 RR rooster, 1 Barred Rock rooster,  10 mutt babies, 50 2nd Gen. FR (meatie project)
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5 kids, 1 Doberman, 1 mini dauchund, 1 min pin, 2 cats, 3 black australorps, 5 black sex links, 11 barred rocks, 6 buff orpingtons, 2 white leghorns, 4 EE, 5 New hampshire reds,  1 black austrolorp rooster, 1 RR rooster, 1 Barred Rock rooster,  10 mutt babies, 50 2nd Gen. FR (meatie project)
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post #3 of 8
Thread Starter 

Thank you for your help! I have chick starter for my layers, could I feed them that until they can have the All Flock? There is a pet store in town that carries meal worms. Would this combo work for the first 7 weeks?

 

*My chick starter and all flock are 18% protein.


Edited by Anna_MN - 2/18/12 at 10:45am

Proud owner of 1 gold star chicken, 1 rhode island red chicken, 3 Columbian Wyandottes, 2 Buff Orpingtons, 5 Easter Eggers, 3 Speckled Sussex, 3 Welsummers, 3 Blue Andalusians, 3 Black Australorps, a black lab, a red tabby cat, and a ragdoll cat! Follow me at- http://raisingyourown.blogspot.com/ (updated 8/25)

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Proud owner of 1 gold star chicken, 1 rhode island red chicken, 3 Columbian Wyandottes, 2 Buff Orpingtons, 5 Easter Eggers, 3 Speckled Sussex, 3 Welsummers, 3 Blue Andalusians, 3 Black Australorps, a black lab, a red tabby cat, and a ragdoll cat! Follow me at- http://raisingyourown.blogspot.com/ (updated 8/25)

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post #4 of 8

Buy game bird starter or turkey starter for them.

 

If you can't buy those, either, you are going to have to switch brands.

Exhibition quality Blue Swedish Ducks and Gray Saddleback Pomeranian Geese,   Hatching eggs available in late winter and spring. NPIP

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Exhibition quality Blue Swedish Ducks and Gray Saddleback Pomeranian Geese,   Hatching eggs available in late winter and spring. NPIP

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post #5 of 8
Thread Starter 

They don't have game bird or turkey either.....and they don't have meat bird starter in any other brand!!! This is so frustrating he.gif I did find a place that will order some for me- but I won't get it until Tuesday and my birds will be here already for a day. It won't be the end of the world if they get regular chick starter for a day will it?

Proud owner of 1 gold star chicken, 1 rhode island red chicken, 3 Columbian Wyandottes, 2 Buff Orpingtons, 5 Easter Eggers, 3 Speckled Sussex, 3 Welsummers, 3 Blue Andalusians, 3 Black Australorps, a black lab, a red tabby cat, and a ragdoll cat! Follow me at- http://raisingyourown.blogspot.com/ (updated 8/25)

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Proud owner of 1 gold star chicken, 1 rhode island red chicken, 3 Columbian Wyandottes, 2 Buff Orpingtons, 5 Easter Eggers, 3 Speckled Sussex, 3 Welsummers, 3 Blue Andalusians, 3 Black Australorps, a black lab, a red tabby cat, and a ragdoll cat! Follow me at- http://raisingyourown.blogspot.com/ (updated 8/25)

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post #6 of 8

I can't see any reason why you shouldn't feed ordinary chick starter. You might (or might not) have to process them a week later, maybe two weeks, but if you're interested in flavor and health that's definitely not a bad thing.

 

The only thing is the chick starter is probably medicated. I would be introducing other feeds toward the end of their second last week, as long as they've had ground exposure all along (so won't get coccidiosis). Just make sure all diet changes are gradual.

 

The odd mealworm would be great. Access to grass is always good for flavor and meat quality.

 

Go for it, I say.

 

regards

Erica

http://www.permachicken.com Permaculture chicken blog: raising chickens with fewer industrial inputs.

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http://www.permachicken.com Permaculture chicken blog: raising chickens with fewer industrial inputs.

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post #7 of 8
Feeding them the Nutrena meat bird feed would be better, but that's just me, I like a higher protein, but it would not hurt them at all to eat the Nutrena 18% chick starter all the way through. It is not medicated so you don't have to worry about that. Good luck. thumbsup.gif

TIME is the best thing to spend on a child!
Always calibrate your hygrometer before you incubate!!

Home to Black East Indies, Mandarins, Speckled Sussex, Barred Rock, Golden Buffs, Welsummers, Ameraucanas, Black Australorp, Silver Laced Wyandotte, Two Weimaraners, Two beautiful daughters and a great DH who builds whatever I need!

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TIME is the best thing to spend on a child!
Always calibrate your hygrometer before you incubate!!

Home to Black East Indies, Mandarins, Speckled Sussex, Barred Rock, Golden Buffs, Welsummers, Ameraucanas, Black Australorp, Silver Laced Wyandotte, Two Weimaraners, Two beautiful daughters and a great DH who builds whatever I need!

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post #8 of 8

I find I like the 20-21% level feed. I get it from my feed mill - there is no "brand" or name to it, just their own custom milled feed. They have what they call the 21% "grower" feed crumble, and then an 18% layer crumble or mash. That's it for chicken feed. They sell in 50 or 100lb bags, load it for me, and are as friendly as all get out.

 

It's fresher and cheaper than the bagged, branded feed. I used to like pellets more than crumble, but that was because the bagged crumble from TSC was generally dustier and had a lot of powder. I like the crumble more now from the mill. All bags do have a tag with nutritional information and ingredients.

 

Check out your local feed mills in the area, to see what they carry (mine carries the layer and grower feed year round). You won't find the variety of brands, but you will find good quality at a lower price. Just ask if they have a non-medicated chicken feed in the 20% range.

How to process chickens at home! A step by step pictorial on processing chickens at home without lots of tools.

~No one ever said you had to be perfect to be happy. ~

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How to process chickens at home! A step by step pictorial on processing chickens at home without lots of tools.

~No one ever said you had to be perfect to be happy. ~

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