Ok so... I kept reading that chickens love yogurt, and read that so do ducks... Also read that chickens (and ducks) love broccoli, cabbage, carrots, strawberries and blue berries, so thought I'd buy the lot but found they don't like any of them! I want my chickens to have the yogurt as I've read its extremely good for them so I mixed it in with one of their favourite treats (corn/wheat/maize mix) then watched astonished as my head hen picked each out one by one and painstakingly wiped them along the surface of the ledge she was standing on until they were practically yogurt free, then she ate them! -- Is yogurt a vital part of a chickens diet and if so any ideas on how I can get them to eat it plz?
Of course yogurt isn’t a vital part of a chickens diet.
It’s dairy.
Chickens are birds not mammals so they don’t actually have the enzymes to process dairy.
They can digest small amounts but they don’t need a lot at all.
More like a couple of bites.
The yogurt thing is very trendy but not necessary.
If you want them to have probiotics, buy a feed that has them.
The most important thing all of your birds need is a well formulated complete feed for poultry.
Everything else are treats and should only comprise 10% of each birds diet so they don’t become obese and start having problems laying or get fatty liver disease.
What is 10%?
Chickens are small animals.
Treats should be about a 1/2 Tablespoon per bird per day.
With that being said...I personally feel that veggies can be given often without issues.
And watch how much scratch you give.
It usually has corn in it and corn can make them fat quickly without much nutritional value.
Their feed usually already has corn in it anyway.
Also, ducks have different nutritional needs than chickens. They need more niacin.
I occasionally feed my birds cottage cheese or shredded cheese instead of yogurt.
It’s less messy and sometimes you can find cottage cheese with probiotics too.
Again...I only give them enough for each to get a couple of bites.
If you want to give treats they’ll really go nuts for, try sardines or tuna.
Sometimes I’ll do canned salmon with the skin and bones.
Omg they love it! Lol.
Fish is good protein for them.
As for the chickens not liking something...usually it’s that they don’t know it’s food.
Unfortunately since people raise chicks instead of broody hens we don’t know how to show them what food is.
You have to start young.
I pull tiny pieces off for my chicks and after a while they’ll start trying it.
They’re instinctively cautious about anything too large to swallow.
My chicks won’t eat sunflower seeds until they’re about 8 weeks old because they’re too large to swallow before that.