Do you feed raw meat to chickens

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I feed them cooked leftovers. The pigs are not picky.
 
Not necessarily. Amphibians are notorious carriers of salmonella, mice carry E. coli in their gastrointestinal tracts and crayfish are known to transmit flukes.
E. coli dies in the presence of oxygen. This is why it thrives on a piece of vacuum sealed chicken unlike on wild animals

Chickens eating such prey and continuing to live healthy lives is direct evidence of it's safety. Try feeding your chickens raw grocery store meat and get back to me
 
That wouldn't be a problem if you had a secure setup. Mine is secure and I don't free range, so foxes and coyotes don't worry me in the slightest. On the contrary - I hope they visit more often, to help with the absolute explosion of wild rabbits on my property, which have been destroying everything.
True. My stuff isn't secure since we moved and haven't been able to build a secure barn yet.
And I do free range when I am home in the afternoons.
I actually have ducks not chickens but they like meat snacks too.
That said.. it's still something to consider. Most people's coops are never as secure as they think they are.
Not implying yours isn't..
Just making a general statement.
 
Always when I have unusable scraps, they love it and it's much less wasteful. They also like to hang around me on slaughter days and eat all the scraps and whatnot, which saves on cleanup. They even drink the blood if I don't save it for the garden. It would seem gruesome if they weren't so dang adorable as they beg for the blood of their kin.

Back when my grandfather was alive he kept his chickens on laying pellets. Every time they started to cannibalize each other he would grab a raw carcass of some sort, like turkey or chicken or rabbit, and set it in the coop for them. The cannibalizing would stop. I keep my birds on a higher protein diet than he did so I don't think I'd have that issue, anyway, but even so, I figure a steady diet of raw scraps from my kitchen and butcher's table to ward off cannibalization behavior before it starts is better than having to treat with raw meat after the fact.
This was interesting by the way. Those grandparents knew a thing or two about a thing or two I'd imagine. I think we probably do a lot of over thinking and over worrying about how we tend our birds these days.
 

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