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yes I think it is a vegetarian feed. I'll have to ask the guy that makes it. I'm getting a lot of eggs from my layer coop, Average of 24 eggs from 30 hens. I do throw in some animal protein here and there. Most my wyandottes aren't old enough to lay yet. I spend a lot of time with my birds and listen and watch, so if there is going to be a problem I can catch it fast. My worst pecking problem was caused by to many pretty roosters that I didn't want to eat and couldn't sell... Freezers full now and feathers are growing back![]()
The issue with a vegetarian diet fed to an omnivore and one that is naturally developed from the curvature of the beak down to the scratching nails on each toe, the muscles in the gizzard and the enzymes in the gut all point to millions of years of evolution resulting in a morphoology hard wired for the ingestion of animal protein - the issue is that eventually hens that have thrived on a typical vegetarian diet will eventually require some nutrients they simply can't obtain from their vegetarian diet. It's not an issue of protein levels- its an issue of what range available amino acids is available in their daily maintenance ration. A proper animal protein supplement is suggested for breeding birds to ensure the most healthy chicks and naturally those that will not develop organ problems or cancer when just 2-3 years old.
Soy makes up a huge percent of what goes into commercial feed. Soy is only poorly digested by chickens. Most of it is actually pooped out - according to just about every amino acid study I've seen published in the Journal of Applied Poultry Research or related publications. Something like 40% of the soy fed to chickens is passed through the digestive system undigested because, I'll reiterate, it's a protected protein- a crude protein- that is not particularly digestible. The digestibility of crude protein in soy is something like 50-60% . The birds have to gorge all day to ingest enough to meet their bare requirements- and this is nowhere near an optimal diet but a reasonably nutritious one. In contrast to soy. Insects. even those covered in thick shells of chitin are upwards of 90% digestible. Grains are well digested as are most cereals- it's just this legume that is hard on their digestive systems. But commercial lay hens have been selectively bred to subsist on soy based feeds since the 50's- but I'll repeat once again- A. this was not round up ready soy B. soy was but one ingredient in a diet rich in animal proteins and fat, which guaranteed a complete diet C. farms kept their birds for years longer than they do today. D. that genetic stock would not have existed if it were maintained on the diets we use today. Since the late 1990's experiments began using GMO soy plenty made its way into feed formulations- nevertheless, it was not legal to use this specific form of round up ready soy in livestock feed until last year. This year marks the first year that a still more potent form of this scary if amazing crop is being introduced into the food chain.
I'm not against it. I'm not for it. I'm just alerting people reading this to what it is.
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And guess what, this increased pesticide load on these GM food crops ends up on your dinner plate, and ends up in the feed given to feedlot animals. So your milk, eggs, chicken and beef are all likely tainted with a lifetime supply of foods either saturated in pesticides or genetically altered to internally produce pesticides.
There is also evidence suggesting that this pesticide-producing corn, soybean and canola continues to produce pesticide once it's inside you (or a feedlot animal), colonizing your gut bacteria and genetically altering it to also produce pesticide within your own cells.
In essence, you become a pesticide producing organism. And do I even need to tell you this pesticide is harmful to your health?
This is both horrifying and perfectly legal, although it clearly violates the spirit if not that actual letter of the Delaney Clause of 1958, an amendment passed by the US Congress to protect a safe US food supply, which states:
"The Secretary of the Food and Drug Administration shall not approve for use in food any chemical additive found to induce cancer in man, or, after tests, found to induce cancer in animals."Using the interpretation of "chemical additive" in the broadest sense to include living organisms whose DNA has been altered to produce pesticide (possibly inside your body) through man-made biological experimentation, then GM crops internally producing pesticides simply must fall under the purview of the Delaney Clause -- but to date GM crops have not been tested beyond a few days time and currently present absolutely zero long-term evidence that their altered DNA does not lead to cancer in either man or animals.
When in fact pesticides have for years been linked to cancer, along with a host of other diseases from Parkinson's to Alzheimer's to miscarrages.
There's some hyperbole in that quoted passage but the facts are solid. The new GMO soy is not only round up ready-it produces its own insecticide. You don't eat it every day as the foundation of your nutrition like your chickens do. This thread is discussing what the use of this material may have on breeding stock- already exhausted from producing hatching eggs. It's energy intensive to produce an egg. Better food better birds.
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