I'd be very cautious of sprouting seeds that are meant to be planted. Many of them are treated with fungicide. You might want to do a search of the companys you buy your veggie seeds from to see if all fungicide treated seeds are so labeled.
Yes Lazy gardner,
That's why I use Plotspike Forage Oats. They have no chemical coating and like other oat seeds are non-GMO being created by special linebreeding at Louisiana State University circa 2002.
http://www.plotspike.com http://raganandmassey.com/product/plotspike-forage-oats/
I get mine at
Tractor Supply. I get the 25 lb.. bag, they also come in a 50 lb. Lasts for years, properly stored.
Why Oats? Historically, oats have proven themselves the very best seed to sprout for poultry. Given as green feed, not grain feed, the sprouts help the males create more robust sperm, hopefully leading to more robust chicks. The green feed sprouts also help bring the hens into lay.
What is green and grain feed?
Grain feed is sprouts 1 thru 3 days old. It is fed instead of part of the daily ration. As an enrichment of their daily ration.
Green feed is sprouts 4 days and older. On the 4th day nutritional change takes place in the sprout which makes it green feed providing to the male and female the virtues listed above. Best to feed the sprouts no older than 7 days. You can grow them longer but there is no nutritional advantage to that and runs the risk of the sprouts spoiling.
For Green feed: feed one cubic inch per bird per day of 4 thru 7 day old oat sprouts. or to bowel tolerance. If bowels get a bit soft, back down a bit in amount and they will firm up again.
Sprouts should smell fresh and feel crisp. If they smell foul and/or feel slimy, they are spoiled, do not feed, discard.
To learn more about the history of sprouted grains, and oats in particular, including how-to, see pages 24 thru 29 of this BYC thread at top of this post.
Best Regards,
Karen