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That was not your original question. Asking questions in a succinct manner is likely to yield the desired feedback.I’m not over thinking. I’m wondering why a company offers layer feed in both 16% and 17% protein.
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That was not your original question. Asking questions in a succinct manner is likely to yield the desired feedback.I’m not over thinking. I’m wondering why a company offers layer feed in both 16% and 17% protein.
My original question was the difference of one over the other. Not how should I think. Thank you for response anyway.That was not your original question. Asking questions in a succinct manner is likely to yield the desired feedback.
I would expect one to be "organic" or "with special added ingredients" or "with pictures of chickens on the bag" or "no corn" or "no soy" or some other difference to make customers think it's better (along with a difference in price.)I’m not over thinking. I’m wondering why a company offers layer feed in both 16% and 17% protein.
It has me perplexed. It’s Kalmbach feed, available in non- GMO. Both 16 and 17%. I’m using 17%. Ingredients seem to be the same.I would expect one to be "organic" or "with special added ingredients" or "with pictures of chickens on the bag" or "no corn" or "no soy" or some other difference to make customers think it's better (along with a difference in price.)
Or maybe they changed the formula, and the old and new versions are both available until they finish selling the old version.
There might be reasons if they're selling to commercial egg producers. I've read that it's common to change the protein content just a little bit as the hens age, to have a small effect on the size of the eggs. But the folks that would care about that would be buying it by the ton, not by the bag, so I wouldn't expect to see both forms easily available to people buying small quantities. (50 lbs at a time is a "small quantity" for this purpose.)
I cannot see why a company would offer both forms if the 1% protein is really the only difference. (They probably have a reason, I just cannot think of what reason it might be.)
Edit to add: or they may have one formulation at one mill, and a different formulation at a different mill, based on which ingredients are cheaper in which area. But they would probably list both versions on their website.
Would that be these?It has me perplexed. It’s Kalmbach feed, available in non- GMO. Both 16 and 17%. I’m using 17%. Ingredients seem to be the same.
I would expect one to be "organic" or "with special added ingredients" or "with pictures of chickens on the bag" or "no corn" or "no soy" or some other difference to make customers think it's better (along with a difference in price.)
It has me perplexed. It’s Kalmbach feed, available in non- GMO. Both 16 and 17%. I’m using 17%. Ingredients seem to be the same.
Agreed. Arsenic is all natural."All Natural" (an industry defined term that doesn't mean what you likely think it means)
Agreed. Arsenic is all natural.