- Aug 16, 2013
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I think I remember that dried crickets are somewhere above 50% protein. Clover is up there, too. But with live bugs and green forage, you have to remember that there is a high water content. This can offset the water intake, a chick in the wild can almost make it off of dew and water from foodstuff. My chickens seem to be their best in the winter when I offer meat and animal fat. I think that soy based protein is the main source of problems with "burning them up" from too much protein. But the big breeds will have problems with growing large before their bones have the right density. Most of the big breeds that haven't been highly refined have inefficient guts, built for handling larger quantities of food. Imagine in the wild, a chicken's first few meals would be relatively high protein bugs or seeds, and as it grows it takes in larger quantities of lower quality food. Not bashing anyone feeding high protein feed for longer periods, just pointing out what is natural.