No tax required on posts about chickens, I have the
@BY Bob Tax Manual, and I'm pretty sure that is a main directive, although it's a late edition.
Excellent posts, thank you again
@RoyalChick !
@MaryJanet I will try to search your posts/thread to find the amounts of each - volume or weight - that you supplemented Peggy with. Did or do you supplement your whole flock, or just Peggy? Did you tailor it to the feed you were using, to compensate for it's particulars? For instance the Nutrena Feather Fixer label does list "choline chloride" and "sodium selenite" (is that selenium?) and "biotin" but they don't list amounts - maybe on their web site they might have a better breakdown, then go from there?
So - if one were to give their chickens some cottage cheese (whole milk?), how much per bird, and would that be per day, or what? Is it considered a "treat" and does one follow the "no more than 10% of diet" rule? And how do you figure that anyway? By weight? Calories? I actually don't know if I've ever seen a calorie listing on a feed label.
Does anyone know how the feed contents / ingredients are figured? When something like fat is measured to be 4% of the feed, is that by weight, volume, or calories? By the way
@bgmathteach 's quoted ratio, though I think I understand the concept, had me wondering - energy to protein, but how measured?
@micstrachan I think RC's posts might have answered your question - that it seems better for the chicken to be using dietary fat to make yolks with, rather than making the fat for the yolks from carbohydrates, yes?
OK sorry again for a long post. Looking to translate our learning to actionable information, but I am way over my head.