- May 30, 2011
- 156
- 6
- 93
Which grain do you add? Corn, wheat, or something like scratch? Thank you so much for easing my mind. I was very worried about the feed. Moving them out I worried about if its warm enough at night but the little cuckoos snuggle in with the meatys so didn't really want to have to separate them. I do have a light for them but its a greenhouse not a coop so a little worried. During the day I have to open the windows gets to warm. I also appreciate your explanation of the FF. I have a couple days off so will give it a try. Will need to get the acv, tomorrow everything will be closed. I have fed my chicks mash which I just added the water to, I should have just let it sitMoved my 2 week old meaties out of the house today! I kept their box really clean but the smell and dander was killing us. Never had issues with the egg layers, is it because of the higher protein in their feed? I also was going to try and separate my Marans from them and get them on to the egg layer starter so...... I fixed up a nice area for them separate from their giant friends and it took them two seconds to figure out they could slip right through the bars of my dog crate and join the others, so I will have to line the crate with hardware cloth. Will the flock starter I have them all on hurt my layers? They are now all residing in my greenhouse. Put down a tarp and a ton of shavings. I figure that will save my soil and as soon as I get their coop done , weather pending, I can take the tarp to the run and rototill it in to the ground. I am concerned about the feed though, my 5 little Marans came in with the others and I had kept them together. I know they need different nutrients for the layers, will the flock raiser affect my Marans?
Flock raiser should be fine for both. Meaties have higher protein needs, and are well known to be smellier - I have never raised them, but reading the Fermented Feed for Meat Birds tells this story over and over. They are a large part of the reason Fermented Feed became so popular here on BYC - evidently FF reduces the smell of their waste significantly. It certainly has reduced the smell of my layer flock to zero. Fermentation increases bio-availability of the proteins in the grains. It is not difficult, in fact it is about as difficult as you choose to make it. When I started mine I used a colander and bowl, now just the bowl. To start, you can do it as simply as mixing the dry crumble with water and let it sit, stirring daily, until it starts to bubble (add more water if all is absorbed). I hurried mine along with ACV, some use kefir, whey, or any number of other starters, but the airborne yeasts will suffice. Warmer is faster, so near a wood stove or heat register helps.
Once mine got going I kept it simple - I scoop out 4-5 cups a day for my layer flock of 6, add a couple scoops of dry (I do one each grains and crumble) and add water to cover, stir, and store until the next day. Doubtless some I feed is just soaked and not fermented, but it's still better for them than dry. My coop doesn't smell, my girls are laying well, seem happy and healthy, so aside from the daily 5 minute investment of time, it is no problem and well worth it to me.
