Quote: Im agreeing with his statement..
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Quote: Im agreeing with his statement..
The X2 is an agreement--Not a doubling of layer crumbles.
If they are having a hard mold, you can also feed them a higher protein feed. Nutreena sells a feather fixer that seems to help.
You've had a sheltered life if you haven't gone through a hard mold yet....ROFLOL!Quote:
Ron - I think your autocorrect didn't like "moult" or "molt". I would sure hate for my chickens to have hard mold on them![]()
Yep, you can double, triple even quadruple the layer pellets, but they will only eat as much as they want so don't bother feeding extra to the wild birds, mice, rats whatever.![]()
Ron - I think your autocorrect didn't like "moult" or "molt". I would sure hate for my chickens to have hard mold on them![]()
This makes perfect sense and I greatly appreciate you explaining this. I aim to have my girls on the best diet available - they of course, will be on laying feed with supplements from my mealworm farm that we will start when we get back, as well as table scraps and extra fruit/veggies. As far as the strains of the hens themselves, I won't know if that is quality until I raise them up and see what they can do. I can say this - the chicks the feed store got in last month (while I have no idea how they lay) were very healthy and clean - I was very impressed.In my opinion it is mainly based on two things; strain and nutrition. If you don't have these two working together you won't get as much as you could when working together. Each breeder can have a different strain. Maybe one breeder is breeding show quality instead of egg or meat; another eggs instead of meat or show; meat instead of eggs or show; or meat from the roosters and eggs from the hens. Then the nutrition has to be right. If you have a chicken with meat genes on egg laying diet your meat will not be great. If you have an egg laying chicken on a meat diet your egg production will tank. You just need to get everything to the right spot. So far I have 3 hens that have been laying every day after the first week of laying. Their first week of laying they would lay every other day. Just as how right now I have 24 pullets and I got 15-22 eggs a day and I've yet to add any additional lighting.
This makes perfect sense and I greatly appreciate you explaining this. I aim to have my girls on the best diet available - they of course, will be on laying feed with supplements from my mealworm farm that we will start when we get back, as well as table scraps and extra fruit/veggies. As far as the strains of the hens themselves, I won't know if that is quality until I raise them up and see what they can do. I can say this - the chicks the feed store got in last month (while I have no idea how they lay) were very healthy and clean - I was very impressed.
Oh yes, I meant to add oyster shells - that is a must for the calcium - though as they free range in my side yard, they will likely get a lot of goodies as well, and being as we live in Florida, our soil is naturally full of calcium AND oddly enough, I have a ton of oyster shells discarded in my yard - not ground up of course, but from a trip to Apalachicola years ago, we have about four bushels of oyster shells discarded around my fruit trees. I have no idea if that will help at all, but it might add to the soil and critters the hens will eat.