California - Northern

I am baking Angel Food Cake right now(about 30 min. to go in the oven). The recipe uses a doze egg whites so I had the opportunity to see a dozen egg yolks from my girls eggs today. They look nice for a Backyard flock without a pasture:



One of them looks almost as dark as the egg in your picture.

I will be making lemon curd soon.
Great, now I want angel food cake and lemon curd! I have spare eggs too!


The float test came back negative, but they said their "solution" may not pick everything up. . We are tempted to send a sample to UCD to have them test it. Is it possible for her to have a full blown case of cocci and have a negative float test?

It's weird because I am pretty positive she has cocci, All the symptoms were spot on.. She has responded to corrid, and is eating (anything in sight!) and pooping normally today. We may turn her back into the flock tomorrow.

Thank you all soooo much for your help.
It could be that the levels were not yet high enough for the test to come back positive. Now that you have her on Corid, the test may not be accurate either. If her symptoms were cocci, and she is responding to the Corid, then I'd say that is what she had.
 
I give my chickens Kale, cabbage, nappa cabbage or something green each day. Good feed also has marigold extract that makes the eggs a darker orange. The fear with the light color yolk is the health of the flock which will lower hatch rate and hatchability.

When you give your chickens greens, do you just give them whole leaves, or do you cut it up? Do you put it in something, or just toss the leaves in? Mine seem to have a little trouble with frond-like greens like carrot tops or fennel fronds... but maybe they just don't like those, or they haven't figured out how to eat them properly. I caught one girl running around with the tail end of a carrot top sticking out of her mouth, the rest down her throat...
Also, do you give them beet greens? I've been looking at this website to see if I should give them things: http://www.poultryhelp.com/toxicplants.html, and it talks about sugar beet leaves, but doesn't say anything about other beets or chard.
 
The float test came back negative, but they said their "solution" may not pick everything up. . We are tempted to send a sample to UCD to have them test it. Is it possible for her to have a full blown case of cocci and have a negative float test?

It's weird because I am pretty positive she has cocci, All the symptoms were spot on.. She has responded to corrid, and is eating (anything in sight!) and pooping normally today. We may turn her back into the flock tomorrow.

Thank you all soooo much for your help.
I am happy for you she is responding. How old was she again? I have heard that Cocci can show up in older birds although it is uncommon.

When you give your chickens greens, do you just give them whole leaves, or do you cut it up? Do you put it in something, or just toss the leaves in? Mine seem to have a little trouble with frond-like greens like carrot tops or fennel fronds... but maybe they just don't like those, or they haven't figured out how to eat them properly. I caught one girl running around with the tail end of a carrot top sticking out of her mouth, the rest down her throat...
Also, do you give them beet greens? I've been looking at this website to see if I should give them things: http://www.poultryhelp.com/toxicplants.html, and it talks about sugar beet leaves, but doesn't say anything about other beets or chard.
You know, I am kind of curious too what everyone says, although I think I know the answer.

When they free range usually the greens they eat are growing in the ground and when they pick at them they get a piece to pull off. A much smaller piece. When I give my girls some of the greens they pick at them and since it isn't growing and stuck in the ground they end up with a whole long strand which they choke down.

My concern when they do that is a sour/impacted crop because they can be hard to break down in long strings.

I have taken to cutting up anything overly long with scissors before I give it to them. I have also take a handful of the long wheat grass and held it tight in my hand with the ends sticking out and they go crazy picking at it and pulling off small strips. I put it on the ground and they pick at it much less because they get the long strands and don't like them as well. The pick one up and shake their head trying to get it to break off and it doesn't work.

Anyway, that is just my observations.

Edited to say: I only do this with the long stringy things like the carrot tops or long grasses.
 
Last edited:
When you give your chickens greens, do you just give them whole leaves, or do you cut it up? Do you put it in something, or just toss the leaves in? Mine seem to have a little trouble with frond-like greens like carrot tops or fennel fronds... but maybe they just don't like those, or they haven't figured out how to eat them properly. I caught one girl running around with the tail end of a carrot top sticking out of her mouth, the rest down her throat...
Also, do you give them beet greens? I've been looking at this website to see if I should give them things: http://www.poultryhelp.com/toxicplants.html, and it talks about sugar beet leaves, but doesn't say anything about other beets or chard.

Kale, beat greens, Chard, collard and other dark greens are very good for them. cabbage is like tomatoes--they can eat the head but not the leaves of the plant.

For the greens I do not chop them up. Chickens like to work. I do not remove the core from the cabbage so they have to work to break it up. I have been doing this with them since they were 6 weeks old.

Actually they are a bit mad at me because I have not gotten the Nappa Cabbage out to them yet! I have been working on a little tractor grow out pen for the Australorps--They have been walking the fence squawking at me.

I better get that cabbage to them soon!
 
Last edited:
Quote: I'm sure Ron will answer, but we give ours chard (they love it) and various types of Chinese greens. If I had any, would also feed beet and turnip tops, collards, mustard greens and broccoli. Some of ours like grape leaves too. I worry about them getting an impacted crop if the stringy greens (like carrot tops) are too long, so we usually chop those or tie to a fence so they can pull smaller pieces off.

Edited to add:
Haha, Ron beat me to it!
 
Last edited:
Hello all I just noticed this thread and I thought I'd check out who's in my neck of the woods.
wink.png
 
Yes, beet greens are very good for them. But be forewarned so you don't panic - the next day you will see red poop everywhere! It's from the beets.

I feed mine beet greens, chard, weeds, carrot greens (they figure out to step on the stalks first), broccoli greens, they steal grape leaves on their own that come through the fence, clover, parsley, and any other dark green I find.

I need to go weed my garden.
 
Hello all I just noticed this thread and I thought I'd check out who's in my neck of the woods.
wink.png
Hi out in Roseville. Sitting here procrastinating on all the chores I have to do today. BYC is the best for procrastination.
lol.png


Yes, beet greens are very good for them. But be forewarned so you don't panic - the next day you will see red poop everywhere! It's from the beets.

I feed mine beet greens, chard, weeds, carrot greens (they figure out to step on the stalks first), broccoli greens, they steal grape leaves on their own that come through the fence, clover, parsley, and any other dark green I find.

I need to go weed my garden.
Apparently mine aren't that smart......Like Alpine mine run around with them sticking out of their mouth Halfway down their throat.
 
Yes, beet greens are very good for them. But be forewarned so you don't panic - the next day you will see red poop everywhere! It's from the beets.

I feed mine beet greens, chard, weeds, carrot greens (they figure out to step on the stalks first), broccoli greens, they steal grape leaves on their own that come through the fence, clover, parsley, and any other dark green I find.

I need to go weed my garden.

i mostly give mine kale, sometimes other greens as well (beet or radish tops, lettuce, etc) -- and they have similarly learned to stand on the kale leaf & rip off a bite-sized piece. although if i have time i'll usually stand there with the greens held tightly in my hand while they peck at them, just to make it easy at first.

i once gave them a head of green cabbage, and the outer leaves were too tough for them to get through! but they were still teenagers then, i should try it again.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom