My four new girls got FF this morning and just went nuts for it! Gobbled it all right up. So glad they took to it so fast!
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My four new girls got FF this morning and just went nuts for it! Gobbled it all right up. So glad they took to it so fast!
I have a question. We are leaving for the weekend, can I put enough ff in feeders to last the 3 days, or should I have someone put it in every day? My neighbor who is taking care of them is a late riser, probably doesn't get over here till about 10am and there is nothing for them to eat early in the morning (the girls get up when it is still dark which right now is about 0615) , Before they were on dry feed in a drop feeder so they had food 24/7. With ff they get fed once a day and it lasts till about 2 pm. then they get their greens and scraps. I thought I could put enough ff out to last, but wondered if anyone else has done this with success. I would have to make another bigger feeder, but that is no problem.
I just pour a little kefir into the feed and add water to get it to the consistency I want. The bacteria in the kefir will multiply in the feed.Oh so you can use milk grains too?
I have some milk kefir sitting in the fridge that's not the tastiest I've made and was wondering what to do with it. I can culture from them since they are active too maybe I can actually do something useful with them. Could you PM me specifics on the best method to make this feed?
A few hours without feed in the morning won't hurt them. If they get 3 day's supply the first day, they may end up going a day or more without feed which IMO is much worse than going 4 hours each day without.I have a question. We are leaving for the weekend, can I put enough ff in feeders to last the 3 days, or should I have someone put it in every day? My neighbor who is taking care of them is a late riser, probably doesn't get over here till about 10am and there is nothing for them to eat early in the morning (the girls get up when it is still dark which right now is about 0615) , Before they were on dry feed in a drop feeder so they had food 24/7. With ff they get fed once a day and it lasts till about 2 pm. then they get their greens and scraps. I thought I could put enough ff out to last, but wondered if anyone else has done this with success. I would have to make another bigger feeder, but that is no problem.
Yep...I do it every month for a three day supply. I just dip out what they would eat in three day's time and leave it. Yeah, I'm aware they probably eat it all in the first two days but it's still the exact same amount of feed, so they are not starving, they are just eating all their food at once instead of spacing it out. The food will store in their crops and move through at a normal pace and sustain them as per usual.
When I come home everyone looks fat and sassy as ever.
How do you know how much ff per bird you should leave out? do you weigh it when it's still dry?
I just pour a little kefir into the feed and add water to get it to the consistency I want. The bacteria in the kefir will multiply in the feed.
A few hours without feed in the morning won't hurt them. If they get 3 day's supply the first day, they may end up going a day or more without feed which IMO is much worse than going 4 hours each day without.
I vote for the neighbor IF they are reliable.
Or go back to the bulk feeder for the weekend.
They don't need feed at night since they can't find it.
How do your chickens get up before it gets light? I've never seen chickens come off the roost in the dark unless there are predators afoot.
That's my point. Restricting feed doesn't hurt them but I'd rather they be restricted a few hours each day than for a day or more.
Quote: This is wonderful Bee because I have been hesitating about getting back into chickens at all or even using FF.... because I will be gone three days at a time if I move myself back to the house. It would be interesting to do a time lapsed record of how the feed is consumed in this manner and find out at what point they run out....
deb