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- #11
Oh, ok! That makes more sense."No synthetic pesticides" is not the same as "no pesticides."
I'm pretty sure there are some pesticides that are acceptable for organic use, because they are considered "natural."
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Oh, ok! That makes more sense."No synthetic pesticides" is not the same as "no pesticides."
I'm pretty sure there are some pesticides that are acceptable for organic use, because they are considered "natural."
Organic means more pesticide than non organic? That's bizarre. Where are you located? In Canada at least, it means no pesticide.To me organic is overhyped. Organic does not mean pesticide free and most of the time growing organically means farmers have to use more pesticides.
When it comes to a organically grown carrot or a non organic grown carrot nutrition wise they are identical. I have been growing lettuce hydroponically on and off for years and I tried organic but it just didn't work as well, organic tends to go off after a while. So any lettuce I would grow and feed my chickens would not be organic.
Have I felt any sideffects from not eating organically? I wouldn't say so, I think having a well formulated fertilizer over an organic (ie cow manure for example) can achieve better results and thus more nutrition in the lettuce.
There are things to avoid when it comes to feed. I would always avoid artificial colors. They cause health problems, same for artificial flavors. Some don't like GM-modified ingredients. I'm undecided on that one, not enough evidence but going with traditional non GM- feed has always known to be fine.
But organic vs nonorganic just reflects the additional pesticides the farmer had to use and probably the reduced crop he got growing 100% organically with no help from science we have developed over the past 100 years to help us grow better crops.
I did have a small flock... then chicken math happened!well regardless why organic is more expensive, whether it is because they don't use pesticides and caterpillas eat the produce or because the pesticides that are organic approved are more expensive ( I read they have to use more of the stuff, whether they actually do, I don't know), lemon has kinda rules it out based on the cost and just a slight increase does work out to a lot but geez lemon, I thought you had a small flock like me, $150 per month is a lot of money on feed.
Well honey I totally understand, my second choice, before S&P made pellets isI would totally use this if I had the money... but for 100# of feed, it would cost about 150 dollars.... which is unfortunately out of my price range. My chickens eat about that much in a month, so that would be near 2000 dollars a year.![]()
I did find a local mill... Conway feed. But it doesn’t specify much at all on the website... it’s a 2 hour drive... but I would like to know more about it instead of driving two hours only to find it’s super pricy or something.I buy organic grower feed by the 1/2 ton minimum from a grain mill that does only organic feeds. I drive three hours one way to pick it up. It is the best feed I have ever seen. They grind it fresh the day before I pick it up. And it comes out to 18.50 for a 50 lb bag. That way beats the $30 40 lb bag of organic grower at tractor supply. I pull it home behind my small SUV on a utility trailer.
I had the layer vs grower feed dilemma too. Now I just provide calcium in addition to the grower and the chicks, hens, roosters, ducks, geese, and guinea hens are all healthy and doing great. They never seemed satisfied on the layer feed.
Do a search and see if you can find a local mill. It is so worth it.