That's why I went on a rant in my previous post about keeping silkies and expecting them to balance out financially as egg producers.Thanks. I missed that. Not ideal free rangers.
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That's why I went on a rant in my previous post about keeping silkies and expecting them to balance out financially as egg producers.Thanks. I missed that. Not ideal free rangers.
Thanks. I missed that. Not ideal free rangers.
My elder sister keeps Silkies. She's a backyard free ranger, but it is a back yard. She's been keeping chickens for 25 years and recently got Silkiies. While she loves the Silkies to bits, she's the first to admit they are as thick as bricks. It's not their fault but......And neither are great or even good producers of eggs.
X2We haven't even touched on fall molting or short days cutting egg production even further.....
I try to make sure I've got a couple of pullets who with luck will lay over the winter which is enough to provide enough eggs for me and the main house. Lucked out a bit this year. Only one of a pair laying and they're sisters!We haven't even touched on fall molting or short days cutting egg production even further.....
That's fair enough. You'll at least need to change breeds then imo so getting rid of what you have looks inevitable anyway.I'm definitely in it for the self sustaining food source, off grid value. I do not love chickens, they were domesticated as a food source and simply that. I'd rather have a pet rock then a pet chicken lol.
Generally the more powder like crumbles I will just put in a small child's swimming pool so the food loss doesn't occur much. The larger solid foods go in the slingers. I of course over a few years have tried different amounts and methods. The silkies in my experience lay just fine, of course they go broody and never leave the coop so I try to feed them by having a feeder that goes off after all the others run to a different area, otherwise they will all stay at the coop and they get beaten out by the roosters and larger birds. I've also experimented with just straight sunflower seed as feed and had plenty of eggs 1 per day per bird as long as there is enough seed to go around so I have to not believe that at all unless you mean you get 2 eggs per bird daily. I've had an entire fridge full of eggs cause getting more then I could eat. At the end of the day it's all common sense....I mostly just wanted opinions on whether keeping them was cost effective for egg return. Not trying to profit, just wanted it to balance out feed $ vs store eggs $ otherwise unless you just love chickens I don't see a point. The entire system is automated redneck style, so other then restock feeders I just collect eggs. Predators are not a problem at all if they are in the small fence area, I basically let them roam because I don't like the idea of caging animals. My significant other refuses to eat most store foods or anything made in the USA which is why I set it all up in the first place. But now they are gone and I'm deciding to keep or get rid of them.