chickenlittle21
There's a piggy in the pasture
but the chickens will eat the scraps and could possibly get salmonella.But isn't this part of composting for fertilizer? Small heads of cabbage hung for fun. Vegetable peels. That sort?
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but the chickens will eat the scraps and could possibly get salmonella.But isn't this part of composting for fertilizer? Small heads of cabbage hung for fun. Vegetable peels. That sort?
Does anyone clean the poop boards into a bucket and then toss the bucket contents into the run?
Also Do you throw kitchen scraps in the run? I worry my girls will eat too much vegetation and not enough flock raiser crumbles if I have a lot of vegetables and grass and leaves and weeds for composting.
no scraps with chickens! feeding chickens scraps is one of the most likely ways to give them salmonella.
say one of your scraps is meat, it can give chickens salmonella even if the animal did not have it.I know there is a debate over feeding chickens kitchen scraps, but I have never heart of any concerns of salmonella. Are you sure about that?
I feed my chickens kitchen scraps all the time, but have never worried about feeding them something my wife and I just ate for lunch and/or supper. OK, no salts, sugars, etc... but almost everything else is fine with me.
Did you know that white potatoes are toxic to chickens.
No, I did not know that white potatoes are toxic to chickens. As far as I knew, you would not give chickens green potatoes, which are also toxic to humans. If a potato in the ground is exposed to sunlight, it turns green, and is not fit for eating by humans or chickens.
say one of your scraps is meat, it can give chickens salmonella even if the animal did not have it.
Rotten food scraps/compost can cause botulism but not likely salmonella.say one of your scraps is meat, it can give chickens salmonella even if the animal did not have it.