Sure I can, but with the info in
THIS post, you should be able to do so w/o me. It isn't magic.
Crude Protein is equal to King's Freedom, and right in the range you would expect for a "layer" type feed.
The
Lysine in Kraut Creek is at 0.6, considerably below the 0.8 in the King Freedom. As I said in the linked post, "Its primarily associated with muscle development, particularly the breast. Differences between 0.75% and 0.8% are negligible, particularly in layer breeds and adults (whose nutritional needs decline as they age). Anything over 0.7% is adequate to the needs of most non-broiler birds. Some more recent studies are beginning to offer 0.8 as the target to reach, but there is room for reasonable dispute." I personally consider 0.6% to be below minimum target (by a little), but there are plenty of off the shelf feeds which are mixed to 0.6 as their target. For
adult smaller body layer-type breeds, 0.6% should be considered adequate, but not optimal.
Methionine at 0.4 is similar to the ones above. As I said in that post, "I consider .4 to be the minimum target, and seek higher levels for my own flocks. Younger birds need more - much more - with literature suggesting levels between 0.5 and 0.7 as targets, but .4 +/- for layers and .5+/- for broilers are common recommends. You will see other commercial feeds as low as 0.3 (based, seemingly, on studies from the late 70s and early 80s when measuring Met apart from Cys was more difficult)".
Your feed is better on
fat and better on
fiber than the King Freedom, with 3.5%+/- commonly offered as targets for both. A little more fati si appropriate for waterfowl and for meat birds being fattened for table. Not a lot of benefit to high fiber in poultry diets unless you are deliberately feed restricting with a high volume low nutritional value feed.
Phosphorus level at 0.7% is also good, better than many. As I said above, "0.5 is common in the industry. 0.6 - 0.8 is better."
and
sodium is right where I'd expect it to be.
SO really, you are giving up a bit of lysine for much better levels of fat and fiber, and somewhat better levels of phosphorus. If your flock is a bunch of adult red sex link hens like comets, cinnamon queens, (or other small body high production layers), etc I'd judge it a clearly superior feed for that purpose. If you are instead using it for a flock of "dual purpose" birds that you want more meat on the bones, a little more fat on the body, then the decision becomes more difficult. I wouldn't recommend it for a mixed age flock or for a mixed gender flock where you intend to keep the roosters for many years, but its a "layer-type" formulation, you knew that already.