Did you ever lose it?Hooray!
Of course I will probably catch white chicken fever again!![]()

Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Did you ever lose it?Hooray!
Of course I will probably catch white chicken fever again!![]()
Thank you for doing the research!Oh you are right - I misread it - it is counter-intuitive. More fat in the diet is better. Who woulda thunk it?!
Meanwhile, I did find the flax seed reference - it is great at adding omega 3 to eggs but prolonged use of flax seed in the feed increases fatty liver.
I found one study on soy-based vs soy-free feeds and it specifically mntioned there were no differences in the livers.
Could be, Michelle. Yet your other hens are doing ok. From that it looks like genetics, don't you think?I don’t know, Bob. Access to feed all the time while they are penned up? All the necropsies I’ve had done besides Ruby revealed excess body fat. I think it is more common than we all think.
Understatement. They are killers. You don't want a head bonk from one of those.Have heard of your cassowary! They can be dangerous! I love their feet, awesome legs and feet!
I can't wait for the conclusionI have no idea, but it sounds plausible. Soy is a big part of commercial chicken food because it is cheap. Fatty live is as you say is associated with estrogen and indeed soy binds to estrogen receptors - so this sounds quite logical to me.
I don't have time right now, but I may rootle around looking for some academic studies on the topic. The only brand I see available has flax and I am sure I read somewhere that is also not great for the chickens themselves.
Oh I have some research to do!
I love your fire escapeNot totally sure - will be up to them a bit. This stage will be a few days so they get used to each other's sounds and smells.
Then there is a little door to the brooder that leads into the rest of the Chicken Palace. A chick-sized door - so nobody can chase them in. The trouble is it is high up, so I have a sort of fire-escape structure I made so the chicks can come and go but I need to be sure they can navigate it and know their way back.
I recall Mark was concerned about the right sort of fat, hence the prescription of cottage cheese in Peggy's diet.Oh you are right - I misread it - it is counter-intuitive. More fat in the diet is better. Who woulda thunk it?!
Meanwhile, I did find the flax seed reference - it is great at adding omega 3 to eggs but prolonged use of flax seed in the feed increases fatty liver.
I found one study on soy-based vs soy-free feeds and it specifically mntioned there were no differences in the livers.
Some of the papers suggest that animal products rather than soy would be healthier for chickens - so fish meal for example.I recall Mark was concerned about the right sort of fat, hence the prescription of cottage cheese in Peggy's diet.
One of the first bits of advice I ever received on byc was from @rjohns39 who said salmon + scrambled egg is an excellent treat for hens, in nutritional termsSome of the papers suggest that animal products rather than soy would be healthier for chickens - so fish meal for example.
Apparently that is what used to be in chicken food, but then with mad cow disease animal products were taken out of feed for cattle and sheep and chicken food was sort of a by-product of that process so it got taken out of chicken feed too even though that is not required.
It left me wondering how to get more meat into their feed - either by feeding them meat and fish (which I do a bit already) and/or by sourcing fish meal. Haven't looked into that yet.