Another reason probiotics are favored over ACV

Citric acid used to be the staple supplement for acidifying water during a sour crop episodes, using it as a natural antibacterial, and also helping the absorption of tetracyclines in water. It was also used to clean out water lines. Some people probably still do that.
 
Citric acid used to be the staple supplement for acidifying water during a sour crop episodes, using it as a natural antibacterial, and also helping the absorption of tetracyclines in water. It was also used to clean out water lines. Some people probably still do that.
good info. I'll be reading up. Just seems that all the old farmers swear by it, and I just kinda tend to trust them. Thanks for the insight, I'll read up
 
good info. I'll be reading up. Just seems that all the old farmers swear by it, and I just kinda tend to trust them. Thanks for the insight, I'll read up

I never met an old poultry keeper who used it. I even have books written by Jull, a Professor and head of the Poultry Department at the University of Maryland from 1930, and a Professor of Poultry from the New York State College of Agriculture first printed in 1955. Nowhere in those publications is ACV even mentioned.
 
so do you get your probiotics form a commercial source or what do you use to provide your girls with probiotics? FF is fermented feed...

Commercial source. You mean as opposed to some person brewing stuff in their garage? Lol. I buy from a local feed store, sometimes online livestock supply, pigeon supply businesses, etc. I prefer Vets plus, Inc. brand called Probios dispersible powder for my flock. Yes, fermented feed. I don't need to do that since I already provide lactic acid bacteria with probiotics.
Here's a good, brief article about probiotics:
http://poultryone.com/articles/probiotics-html
 
Chiming in here. We are new to keeping CHICKENS, but not new to keeping pet birds (parrots, conures, canaries, etc.).

We add ACV (Bragg's with mother) at the rate of 1 tablespoon to 1 gallon of water. That's daily.

Four times a year, we do the following:

Add ACV at the rate of 3 tablespoons to 1 gallon of water for 10 days. Days 11- 20, we add probiotics to the water (we buy a brand from Avitech, but there are lots to choose from). Then, for the next 3.5 months, back to the 1 tablespoon/1 gallon ratio.

The thought is that with this, the ACV is acting as the "antibiotic" (although I tend to think that is WAY too strong a word for it!) for ten days, then the lacto is acting as the probiotic for ten days, to "rebuild" the good bacteria that the ACV may have supressed.

My understanding is that at the rate of 1 tablespoon to 1 gallon, the ACV is too diluted to have much "antibiotic" effect, but tends to just, instead, prevent the slimy water cups!

Just my 2 cents. It's worked well for us for years!

Michelle in Massachusetts
 
Michael, the PDF you link to in your original post, the link is broken. Can you repost?

Many probiotic foods are acidic...fermented feed, sauerkraut, kimchi, sourdough bread. All of these are loaded with probiotics and one of the byproducts of LABs (lactic acid bacteria) is lactic acid. Sure, the acetic acid in 5% ACV is a stronger acid than the lactic acid in a typical batch of FF, but the ACV is diluted 1:256 rather than undiluted FF. Surely the acid in the FF must be stronger than the diluted ACV...

Also, I have started many a batch of sauerkraut using a tablespoon of vinegar (white or ACV) per gallon of chopped cabbage, salt being the only other ingredient. If the antibacterial effect of vinegar really worked, then the kraut would not ferment properly and the LABs would not proliferate. This has not been my experience as the kraut has always turned out great.

In my passion in learning about all things fermented, one thing I have learned is yes there are good and bad bacteria. Or you might call them probiotic bacteria and putrefying bacteria. The putrefying bacteria cannot live in an acidic environment. You want acids (not sure as far as an acidic environment, beyond my knowledge set) in the gut. Acids from vinegars or LABs are a good thing.

I don't use ACV in our bird's water, but I do use a liquid probiotic called EM, maybe you've heard of it. Yes, I do brew it at home, with a purchased bacterial starter. I have used it for my own use for about 18 months now and since we just got chickens, I give them a choice between plain water and the EM water and they always choose the latter. The EM I brew has a pH of about 3.2 and Braggs ACV shows up as 2.9 ( it may actually be lower, 2.9 is the lowest my test strips gauge). I mix the EM in water about 1-2T/gallon.

I'm on the same page as you, I think probiotics in water is superior to vinegar. I just don't think it's because ACV is antibacterial to all bacteria. It will have such an effect on the putrefying bacteria but will actually help the native probiotics thrive.

An interesting note on probiotics (sorry I have no reference at the moment) is that eating or drinking probiotics, at least in humans, are just passing through. Studies have shown that very few of the ingested probiotic bacteria take up residence in the gut. They do help digest food while they are in the gut, but soon exit the body. Apparently the resident probiotic bacteria are highly specialized and not particularly food worthy...they smell like, well, poop. And the only way (so far) to increase your resident bacteria (say that have been completely wiped from heavy duty antibiotic use) is a fecal transplant, which is just what it sounds like. All this research I'm familiar with is from human studies, maybe there are similars for chickens?
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom