'Tis trueYes, I think so.![]()
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'Tis trueYes, I think so.![]()
Mine, rooster, juvies & hens, are on 20% Flock Balancer, from the local co-op, free choice, year 'round, plus all-day free range when the predator activity is down.I agree. Mine are currently on half layer/half grower, but only 2/3 are laying right now due to molt. I’d like to find an all flock raiser, as the grower I buy is 22% protein and I wonder if it has issues of its own.
My DH and I eat a paleo diet. My dogs and cat are fed a BARF (biologically appropriate raw food) diet. I couldn't, in good conscience, just toss pre-made food to my chickens any more than I would eat it. I don't like the ingredients listed on the bags of commercially prepared feeds.
I KNOW that many here advise against mixing homemade feed. But I have had my flock of 9 chickens on my own homemade mix since they were 7.5 weeks old. I ferment this feed and they are very healthy birds. No illnesses at all. I've had two different "chicken" people meet my flock for different reasons and both kept commenting on how beautiful my birds are.
They used to free-range but I only let them out for about 1 - 2 hours in the evening now. They are confined to a 1/4 acre pen but there is still a ton of green grass, plants and critters available to them.
I just picked up 3 new girls to add the to flock. They are 2 leghorns and one CA white (a LH hybrid). I know they are a more petite bird than my breeds but they are roughly 2 months older than mine and about 1/2 the size or less.
No more data than that but until something changes, I'm staying my current course.
I’ve been experimenting with feed here and I’ve had some interesting results. Unfortunately after six months all I can say is this is what happened under these circumstances which may or may not be relevant to any other circumstances.It’s all really fascinating, isn’t it? It’s really difficult to know what’s optimal.
Mine are confined most of the work week and free range (with access to their feed, too) most of the weekend.
One of the feeds I used to get here was fishmeal based and if it hadn't had such high calcium and salt content I might have stuck with it.I source my ingredients locally. I live near the finger lakes region of New York state and there are a lot of organic farmers there.
I purchase most of my ingredients from Lakeview Organic Grains (LOG).
Here is my recipe for 100 pounds of mix (I usually just mix up 50# of feed because it is easier for me to lug up the stairs):
40# triticale/barley mix
15# field peas
10# whole oats
12# black oil sunflower seeds (in hull)
8# whole flaxseed
7# fishmeal (from LOG) - it is specifically packaged for reuse in feeds
4# of oyster shell
4# of Fertrell poultry Nutri-balancer
I store all my ingredients in my basement in an old apartment sized refrigerator that I had the coolant removed from. I then removed all the metal and sealed the rear penetrations into the body of the refrigerator to create a grain bin with air tight seals.
I offer OS on the side too.
This mix has about 2.5% Ca and 17.25 - 19.25% protein. The bioavailability of the protein is supposed to increase by 12% due to the fermentation process. Who knows how accurate that is?
I mix it up well and ferment each days worth of feed in it's own container for 3 to 4 days until really bubbly and a thin film of yeast has formed. I then drain it with a kitchen strainer and mix well again. I use the drained liquid to start my next batch.
@Texas Kiki… My understanding is that almost all research on chicken nutrition is geared toward industry, meaning it is for birds that are meant to be turned into meat in a matter of weeks or for egg layers that will pump out as many eggs as possible and be discarded in a year or two... I wonder if their nutritional requirements are different than what the studies say...