Okay thanks! I'll try adding a little AVC! I don't do lacto-fermentation, so hopefully it will still work.From Natural Chicken Keeping:
While not a starter culture used in lacto-fermenting, it (ACV) can be added to lacto-fermented feed at any time in small amounts for its other great benefits!
Since I prefer - and use - lacto-fermentation, one of my goals is to keep naturally occurring yeasts/molds/fungus from proliferating in the feed so that the LABs can be dominant in the mix.
As stated above..For LACTO-FERMENTATION my personal "rule of thumb" is:
If I can smell yeast/mold or alcohol, I don't feed it to my chickens.
When these smells are present and strong enough for me to notice, I know the LABs are out of balance and yeasts or alcohol are becoming more dominant.
To help illustrate with an example with which most are familiar: consider a candida overgrowth in our bodies. (Commonly referred to as a "yeast" infection.) Although yeasts are always present in our systems, it is the balance that is the issue. When yeasts are kept in balance, it allows the "good bacteria" to proliferate in our system and create a healthy gut flora which helps our immune system to do its job. If the yeasts get out of balance in our body, we take action to help correct the imbalance and return the "good bacteria" to dominance.
If I ever smell either yeasts/molds or alcohol in my feed I have used ACV to help quickly bring the pH level down (increase acid) which (in moderation) can help retard the growth of the yeasts and allow the Acetobacter bacteria that's contained in the ACV mother to digest any alcohol that may have been produced by naturally occurring yeasts. When used in small amounts, it can retard the growth of the yeasts just enough to allow the LABs enough time to re-establish a dominant colony that is able to keep the molds/yeasts in check.
