Hey guys! This post is mostly just out of curiosity. Would love to know yalls thoughts.
I feed my flock regular layer pellets, every now and then maybe some food scraps or worms off my garden plants. I'm not planning on changing anytime soon, just curious.
But I have always wondered why people don't grow their own crickets, worms, or meal worms to supplement their chickens? I know reptile owners or fisherman raise them for bait of feed. And with the right setup, they reproduce like crazy. I'm assuming on a larger scale, you would have plenty. And they are easy to raise.
I love the alternative feed types (can't back them up, since I haven't tried them or know much about them) like fodder, fermented, vegetable/food scraps, etc. Even watched a video of a farm that feeds chickens totally off huge compost piles.
I know there are all the nutrition plans to work out to make it realistic. But I like the thought of being able to feed from things produced at home. Crickets, worms, meal worms, garden bugs, vegetables and fruit grown. I know it's probably more work then what you actually get out of it, but it is something to think about.
I feed my flock regular layer pellets, every now and then maybe some food scraps or worms off my garden plants. I'm not planning on changing anytime soon, just curious.
But I have always wondered why people don't grow their own crickets, worms, or meal worms to supplement their chickens? I know reptile owners or fisherman raise them for bait of feed. And with the right setup, they reproduce like crazy. I'm assuming on a larger scale, you would have plenty. And they are easy to raise.
I love the alternative feed types (can't back them up, since I haven't tried them or know much about them) like fodder, fermented, vegetable/food scraps, etc. Even watched a video of a farm that feeds chickens totally off huge compost piles.
I know there are all the nutrition plans to work out to make it realistic. But I like the thought of being able to feed from things produced at home. Crickets, worms, meal worms, garden bugs, vegetables and fruit grown. I know it's probably more work then what you actually get out of it, but it is something to think about.