Alfalfa/ hay cubes

Abborgialli

Chirping
Jun 5, 2024
43
39
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Does anyone have experience giving their birds hay cubes or alfalfa cubes like you'd throw out for a horse?

You wouldn't want them wet.... dry of course so they could peck them.

Thanks!
 
The cubes include stem matter which is less appetizing for the birds.
Plenty of people have given them with mixed results consumption wise. If I remember right, they have better results wetting them.

From time to time, we give ours a flake of fresh Alfalfa hay. This they love! It's all-day fun for them to scratch through it and find good leafy bits. They leave all the stems behind.
 
The cubes include stem matter which is less appetizing for the birds.
Plenty of people have given them with mixed results consumption wise. If I remember right, they have better results wetting them.

From time to time, we give ours a flake of fresh Alfalfa hay. This they love! It's all-day fun for them to scratch through it and find good leafy bits. They leave all the stems behind.
Do you just throw a bale out?
 
Do you just throw a bale out?

Just a flake (slice). They would totally pig out.
Also, with hay it's really important to manage it so it stays dry and doesn't go moldy. That can have bad health affects. Or even spontaneously combust (mold works up heat inside the bale). So you don't want to expose the whole bale to moisture / humidity.

We haven't done it for a while, but I've been thinking about getting one next week for their entertainment now that other greens are slowing down.

Definitely get the bale from a rural livestock feed store, less than $20 for a big one makes it affordable.
Since the chickens can't / shouldn't eat it fast like large livestock, what we do is first make certain it's completely fresh and dry. While the baling twine strings are still on, we ease the end into an XL trash bag, with the seams horizontal so it fits well. Pull that all the way over without tearing the bag. When we get it home I bring it inside, the storage conditions are much better in the climate control.
Then sit the bale on its skinny end up against a wall/corner in its final storage position (be sure before proceeding). With the trash bag drawstrings at the top of the bag, *you should leave it open to let the bale breathe. Cut the strings at the top there, and pull off the first flake. I use a plastic tote to carry the flake out so I'm not spewing hay everywhere. For just a few chickens you can split the flake with a bit of effort (and potential mess).
There are probably a lot of ways to cleanly store a bale inside (big trash can, jumbo plastic tote) but the important thing is to let it breathe. If you live in a dry climate, traditional storage in the barn up on a pallet works, but with our humid climate and the slower pace of consumption we needed the climate controlled conditions.
A bale usually lasts us a month, we don't give a flake every day. If there's still leaf matter lingering, give smaller amounts (unlikely, they love it). Oh, and make sure it's straight alfalfa, not a mix. There's a lot of stems left behind that are good for the garden.
 
Just a flake (slice). They would totally pig out.
Also, with hay it's really important to manage it so it stays dry and doesn't go moldy. That can have bad health affects. Or even spontaneously combust (mold works up heat inside the bale). So you don't want to expose the whole bale to moisture / humidity.

We haven't done it for a while, but I've been thinking about getting one next week for their entertainment now that other greens are slowing down.

Definitely get the bale from a rural livestock feed store, less than $20 for a big one makes it affordable.
Since the chickens can't / shouldn't eat it fast like large livestock, what we do is first make certain it's completely fresh and dry. While the baling twine strings are still on, we ease the end into an XL trash bag, with the seams horizontal so it fits well. Pull that all the way over without tearing the bag. When we get it home I bring it inside, the storage conditions are much better in the climate control.
Then sit the bale on its skinny end up against a wall/corner in its final storage position (be sure before proceeding). With the trash bag drawstrings at the top of the bag, *you should leave it open to let the bale breathe. Cut the strings at the top there, and pull off the first flake. I use a plastic tote to carry the flake out so I'm not spewing hay everywhere. For just a few chickens you can split the flake with a bit of effort (and potential mess).
There are probably a lot of ways to cleanly store a bale inside (big trash can, jumbo plastic tote) but the important thing is to let it breathe. If you live in a dry climate, traditional storage in the barn up on a pallet works, but with our humid climate and the slower pace of consumption we needed the climate controlled conditions.
A bale usually lasts us a month, we don't give a flake every day. If there's still leaf matter lingering, give smaller amounts (unlikely, they love it). Oh, and make sure it's straight alfalfa, not a mix. There's a lot of stems left behind that are good for the garden.
Fortunately we live in Wyoming, it's drier than a popcorn fart 😀 😜 so we don't much have to worry about mold. I never really had to with my horses. We usually just pop the twine and let it fall open so it stays dry where we store it. The shake leftover can definitely be put to good use- thank you!
 
Fortunately we live in Wyoming, it's drier than a popcorn fart 😀 😜 so we don't much have to worry about mold. I never really had to with my horses. We usually just pop the twine and let it fall open so it stays dry where we store it. The shake leftover can definitely be put to good use- thank you!

A popcorn does what now?! 🤣

Great news that you can store it in your barn, that's definitely much easier!
Sorry for the over-explanation, I just had someone ask me all surprised once how we could deal with a large bale in backyard type conditions, and where they even come from, so I thought that every time it comes up I should give all the details, lol. Anyone feeding hay to other livestock doesn't need all that. 😉
 
A popcorn does what now?! 🤣

Great news that you can store it in your barn, that's definitely much easier!
Sorry for the over-explanation, I just had someone ask me all surprised once how we could deal with a large bale in backyard type conditions, and where they even come from, so I thought that every time it comes up I should give all the details, lol. Anyone feeding hay to other livestock doesn't need all that. 😉
It is so much appreciated! Thank you!
 
I planted some alfalfa on the counterscarp of a ditch to help control erosion. I was planning to string trim it and give the chickens some fresh alfalfa.
 

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