Just a couple quick questions if I may..
My chickens are a varied bunch when it comes to ages....3 between 1 1/2 and 2 1/2 years old (not laying), 1 x 9 month old who is laying 9 days straight and counting (yaay!), 5 x chicks that are 27 weeks old (still waiting for the first egg). 2 x young roos in that 27 week old age group, and lastly a group of 4 x 9 week olds.
Should I be feeding them layer or grower rations? (Taking into account the couple of roos and the fact all but one is laying!)
And, if adding grains to the fermented mix cuts the ration....is this something I want to be doing or not?
Sorry if I'm overthinking things or getting myself confused. Just trying to figure out why only one is laying....they've been on fermented feed for months already.
Your older gals are probably in molt right now, so they may not be laying for that reason...and, depending on their breed, they may be on the downhill slide of their laying life anyway.
The youngsters are not old enough to lay and the roosters...well....you'll be waiting a long, long time for them to lay. Don't be holding a carton under those guys...
I'd be feeding them all a layer ration mixed with a lower protein grain because no one is laying except one! They don't NEED all that super nutrition if they are not producing and the youngsters don't need all that protein either just to grow up...unless you are trying to turn out show birds for a competition coming up, they will do just fine on regular, lower proteins at that age.
Now, you'll hear different opinions from other folks and you'll have to choose your own way on all that...I'm just telling you how I do it and I get good growth, good laying, good health on a lower protein at this time of year than most people feed. Actually, I get all that on lower proteins at other times of the year also.
For some reason people got it into their heads that more protein produces more eggs and healthier chickens and that's simply not so...not even remotely so. If you have a high production animal and you don't mind what it does to their health, you just want as many eggs as possible, as quickly as possible~darn the cost and the bird's lives~then high pro is the way to go!
If not, slow down the roll on chucking high protein feeds in those bird's mouths and realize that athletes, hunting dogs and race horses get high proteins because they are actually moving at a fast pace and doing a lot of work every day.
Chickens are not and their systems cannot take high pro feeds without eventually showing some really poor results in health and laying. I'm not saying go drastically in the other direction and cut out proteins, but if your birds are confined and they are not producing right now, they don't need high pro feeds.
If they free range and they have good forage, they are getting great protein out on the pasture and the feed ration is merely a supplement...and if they are not laying right now, they don't need anymore proteins than they are getting on forage and in regular rations...even mixed with some whole grains.