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- #51
Nice thread Centrachid! I just posted about looking into Dominiques on a Goat thread! Your property would be great for goats (I am having fun with mine)-- having a devil of a time keeping them out of the chicken feed, though-- As to my hens, mine moulted too(done mostly cept for 2 birds not eating enough d/t goat issue) - I have been using gamebird starter as well -- but have decided these Jersey Giants alittle too heavy on the feed! Need to look at other breeds.... I dont know if you stated where you got them, are they from breeders (did notice you specified Missouri Vs American Dominiques)--
love my dogs too-- 2nd winter and still not one predator loss (they come in at night on their own).....coop is open though....
I plan on acquiring about a dozen Katahdin Sheep ewes and four Keiko Goat does with one buck of each for pasture management. They will not be given access to entire pasturable area; rather they will be used to groom area into a patchwork of heavily grazed, lightly grazed and areas grazed only every third year or so. That should allow better autochthonous foraging for birds and a method to attract allochthonous insect forages drifting in from neighboring properties. The well manicured pasture for poultry is against my religion. The ruminants will also convert some of the tougher greens into gleanable for chicken eats contained in feces.
Feed I am using varies with season and is usually offered as a restricted ration except with Dominique chicks.
I acquired my American Dominiques from 6 sources but quickly whittled that down to just over one dominated by representatives of the Voter Line acquired through Fred Farthing of Missouri. The Missouri Dominiques are a composite of American Dominique (mostly Voter with a little Cackle Hatchery) and American Game that is being selected for typical American Dominique type but American Game feathering and foraging habits. The Missouri Dominique already compares very favorably with respect to egg production and fertility but has a smoky pattern to flight feathers that might be allowed to persist.