Thank you for this. It is interesting about feathers and digestion, too, thanks!Sometimes birds eat feathers just becauseI'm not saying they don't need more protein but there's more than one reason for feather eating: boredom, curiosity, stress, illness... Some birds, like grebes, eat feathers to help with digestion. When my girls were young I caught them eating feathers a few times but they were otherwise healthy and growing normally. I wonder if they were using the feathers as grit, because at that time I don't think we were providing them with any.
Yep, I am mixing too, and making the heat pad take up less space, as last night I thought they couldn't get away from it enough.I try to mix feed together (chickens, dog, cat...) when changing things just to give them time to get used to it before the old is entirely gone.
I also leave the heat until they're no longer using it, then leave it another week. I don't know how they feel, so am trusting each one to take care of that themselves.
If I mix the gamebird 24% and regular chick starter/grower (non-medicated) 18%, then I should get 21%.- 20% is a good level of protein. I think some would say above 24% is probably a bit high, although others say 'too much' protein is more a 30% sort of thing. There seems to be consensus that 20% is great. I feed 20% protein but of course the Princesses supplement with bugs and I give them scraps which are often lower protein. So mine get +/- 20%.
- You really don't need medicated feed. Again, views differ, but many would say you don't need it ever and just treat if they get a problem. Others say give very young chicks medicated when they first encounter the great outdoors. Anyway, by now, yours really don't need medicated feed and as medicated feed works by blocking one of the B vitamins, you may even be better off without medicated so they don't get any deficiencies.
As I said, not an expert, but my 2cents worth.
I feed Kalmbach 20% non-medicated - the feather one when everyone is laying as it has extra calcium, and the flock one during winter when they stop.
I have changed my mind and will likely try non-medicated for chicks next time. I've solved the water issues that were giving the vet ideas about coccidiosis as Annie's ailment (the fecal floats by me were negative, and ultimately so was the vet's test). I agree it could cause unintentional nutritive problems, though it's supposed to be just mildly inhibiting for thiamine. Maybe in certain individuals it isn't minor. These general things like "it's fine to give medicated feed" don't account for outliers in nutrition needs. Isabel's weird seemingly neurological situation is swaying me on this, it can't be helped with inhibiting some thiamine. Maybe she needs more, who knows?
This picture is pretty amazing, it has such a 3-D look!
I know that Chick-Fil-A has a gaping hole in his head, and itâs hard to look at him sometimes. But love is love, and he needs all the love he can get. His little life hasnât started out so well. But now heâs coming around a bit. Heâs trusting me enough to eat from my hand.




This behaviour is very cool. The picture took me aback, frankly. It didnât look real, Ăowyn is huge! It appears as if the Phyllistines are in front of a photo studio backdrop picture!They will actively seek the cat out now if the other big ones are around. It's like they know Lady Featherington doesn't care for the cat and won't come near it by choice.
Caption: âLivestock Guard Cat (these are not bantam chickens)â
