We've been in the midst of torrential rain and wind storms here in the PNW for days now and no end in sight. My seven birds are confined to coops with out access to green stuff until the storms pass so the thought of adding alfalfa to my FF sounded intriguing.
A 40 lb. bag of alfalfa cubes cost me $12.
I will ask about the timothy grass pellets next time.
I soaked six alfalfa cubes in warm water for a few minutes then tossed the whole thing in the FF. Stirred once. Gave a sample to all the birds. They gobbled it down faster than ever I've seen since getting them! Especially the 3 1/2 month old Silkie chicks!
My FF is two weeks old now and a bucket full of bubbly goodness. Sometimes it's soupy sometimes it's thick as mortar. Never seen any mold ever. No mess, no fuss, just scoop and go. I use the two bucket method. It works very well for me and I just use one scoop and one bowl each feeding. About two gallons going at any time. The same liquid with mother I started with two weeks ago. I just add every other day to keep it percolating. Pretty straight forward and easy.
[COLOR=4B0082]I thought that the alfalfa cubes would be a much higher fiber content (loaded with sticks). Are they not?[/COLOR]
These statements make me think that mine isn't fermenting to it's full potential. Mine really only bubbles when I stir, I never see bubbles when it's just sitting there. Any suggestions?
[COLOR=4B0082]If your ff is nice and thick then you won't see bubbles. You may hear them if you're sitting near by on a quiet evening. In the morning before you feed, you may see little holes in the surface of your ff. These mean that it is fermenting just fine.[/COLOR]
I feed once a day for the big birds, and twice a day for chicks. I don't drain anymore because it was so tiresome. I probably go through 1/3 of a garbage can a day and I feed roughly 150 birds. That's chicks included in that, but also turkeys and geese. The turkeys eat 2 or 3 times that of a chicken.
I'd like a simpler way for my mass of birds. I'm trying a two bucket system for the chick feed since I only have a few (well 18), and the water is not draining off the chick starter. I think you don't have the soupy mess like a lot of us do because you use whole grains and mash. I only have access to crumble or pellets, both of which are clogging the little holes I made. Is there something I can do to better this?
[COLOR=4B0082]According to Bee, you can give lay pellets to chicks. I just wouldn't start them on it. I bought one 5 lb bag of starter for 4 chicks and when that's gone, they're going to get what everyone else gets.[/COLOR]