Vitamin C= chocolate
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Since it is a bakers' yeast, I'm pretty sure it is safer than any wild unknown free yeasts in the air that one would inoculate their FF with.
If one doesn't inoculate. One doesn't know what safe or unsafe things are in there - including molds.
I think having chick grit available helps with pasting. Do you have chick grit available?
Thanks for the reminder, the first time I ever raised chicks, I pretty much attributed it to temperature swings.I've noticed, in my chick rearing, that pasting also seems to derive from brooder temps and their consistency, so was wondering if you were factoring that in?
~~In the broiler industry they recommend heating the floor between flocks, before applying new bedding and bringing in chicks.I noticed I had a little pasting in my last brooder because of cold coming up from the ground...I had forgotten to place a barrier there under the bedding as I had previously. When I decreased the brooder size just a little and placed something under the coop bedding for them, it cleared my inconsistent brooder temps up right away and the pasting left immediately thereafter. They were on FF so I don't think it was the diet but the irregular temps I was providing, so now I always look at that when folks mention pasting.
I agree on the definition of production...at least, for me, production is when they are in peak laying season...if the majority of my flock are laying in the winter I call that production levels and I keep them on more of the layer ration. If they are not, I cut it down with whole grains. Come early spring when laying production increases, I increase the layer ration mix to 100%. Right now, by sheer happenstance of layer mash being the cheapest grain at the mill, my whole flock are on 100% with some BOSS thrown in for fat. They've been on that for some time now and I was getting only one egg a day from an ancient WR.
Now, however, a few pullets have decided to start laying.
There is definitely a lot of calcium in exoskeletons and greens.One thing I think is often overlooked in poultry in regards to calcium is the foraging of good grasses and how absorptive the calcium there is to the animal. I've offered OS in the past free choice and saw no changes in the flock whatsoever, though they did nibble it down to size. I've deduced that my flock gets adequate calcium from their diet that is high in the right kind of calcium that is easier for them to absorb from a natural diet of bugs, worms, lizards, snakes and pasture grasses.
I find what he says about the usability of the calcium in feeds and I think the process of fermentation is helping with that absorption, if anything can be derived from the reports of thicker shells when using FF. I've fed OS and not gotten any thicker shells than previously but this FF does seem to increase shell thickness to some degree.
I also note he quotes calcium needs for production birds to be higher than what one typically finds in a layer ration. I'm thinking the access to pasture and bug forage will always be the most efficacious way of providing these essential nutrients to our chickens.
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I think there are a lot of folks not inoculating and the reason being is that the wild yeasts that grow lactobacillus are a mite stronger than other molds in the air unless, of course, you live in one seriously moldy, damp household. If your mix, left open to air, grows nothing but harmful molds, this is not a place where anyone should be living at all.
Originally Posted by Beekissed
I think there are a lot of folks not inoculating and the reason being is that the wild yeasts that grow lactobacillus are a mite stronger than other molds in the air unless, of course, you live in one seriously moldy, damp household. If your mix, left open to air, grows nothing but harmful molds, this is not a place where anyone should be living at all.
If your mix is properly covered with water, it won't grow mold. lacto fermentation is anaerobic, while I believe mold is aerobic. I ferment whole grains so usually don't have anything helpful to add, but I have noticed the trend away from keeping the feed covered in water and also wanting to allow less time for the ferment to happen. Neither are particularly harmful to chickens ( as long as you don't have mold), because even moistened feed is considered beneficial,BUT neither promote the ferment, leaving a good chance that many of us are feeding moistened feed, not fermented feed. That is one reason that when I see someone having "unusual" problems using "fermented" feed I tend to advise them to go back to the beginning and insure that what they are feeding, is in fact, fermented.
Aerobic and anaerobic bacteria can be identified by growing them in test tubes of thioglycollate broth:If I understand what I'm reading correctly, keeping the feed under water doesn't create an anaerobic state...water has an oxygen molecule so there really is no way to exclude oxygen from your mix in this manner. Anaerobic fermentation merely means that lactobacillus can make ATP(energy) without using oxygen, not that you have to deny it oxygen to get correct fermentation. These yeast spores live in the air, so their living and thriving do not depend on the exclusion of oxygen...they just have the ability to convert energy without needing oxygen to do so. They thrive equally well in oxygen rich~ or deficient~ settings.
That said- do you have any suggestions to help Pegm with the runny poop problem?
I had soupy ff when I was using Layena feed. Soon as I stopped using that and started back using my other brand I stopped having soupy ff.Reporting back here on the soupy FF problem I was having, along with resulting soupy poops from the flock.
I believe the two-bucket method has the problem licked. I took one bucket and peppered the bottom with holes, and drilled a couple of rows of somewhat larger holes on the sides. I filled this bucket with the fermenting mash. Twelve hours later, there was no puddling of excess liquid in the mash, and it was much more the consistency that I have been wanting. As the batch was consumed, it became dryer than I liked, so I merely retrieved some liquid from the catch bucket and poured it over the mash to bring it to the desired moistness.
I've got a second batch going in a separate bucket. It's been fermenting for about three days now without the excess moisture being drained off. After I feed the last of the first batch tomorrow, I plan to transfer the new batch to the bucket with the holes, and start letting the excess moisture drain.
There's no doubt whatsoever that my feed is fermenting. It has a tangy odor that's a lot like the smell of wine. It's got the goods all right.
I believe the poops are becoming less soupy, too. Problems all seem under control!