Mouthwash
Songster
My wife started juicing celery and I'm wondering if there's any reason they couldn't eat the left over pulp?? Not as any main part of their diet, but as just a way to have less food wasted into the garbage.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
It's almost like a powderThey can eat it, just make sure there's no stringy pieces. Don't want crop problems.
Like I said it would be just as a way of reducing waste. Not as a regular part of their diet. A whole bushel of celery left about a palm full of pulp that was "sandy" in texture, along with the leafs that we didn't juice. I actually had the idea to freeze the pulp in ice cubes to give them during the hottest part of the day.I assume the point of juicing it is to get the nutrients in it? So...the pulp doesn't have those nutrients?
It still has some nutrients unless you do a lot more to extrct them than just chop, juice, and strain. Might want to be a bit cautious about the proportion of fiber in the overall diet vs the amount of nutrients in it.
I would probably feed a little of it but if there is more than a little very often, compost it and let the chickens eat the plants the compost fed.
because they're bitter. Again I didn't ask "is it healthy for them" and not really your opinion on how often or why we are juicing, just "is there any reason the chickens can't eat it."Why don't you juice the leaves?
I thought of a bushel was just a bundle they sell at the store so I didn't really think it was a literal measurement. I actually didn't really read your other comment because I saw you talking about your son's shoe size and cilantro. Literally just wanted to know is there a reason they can't eat it. It's all I asked. Seems like the answer is yes they can.I don't care how often or why you juice. And didn't ask. If I had had a less stressful week or been comfortable enough to sleep, I would probably have taken a half a sentence to say all that: a tablespoon or less per chicken per day on the days they don't get other treats won't harm them.
It didn't occur to me that likely/possible health impacts from eating it wasn't what you wanted to know.
Thank you about the celery leaves. I've been intensionally eating more of the parts of vegetables that my mother threw away. Sometimes, they are the most nutritious parts; sometimes there is good reason to not eat them. I didn't know about the celery leaves.