Free range vs feed

mrslaura

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If my chickens free range every day, do I still need to keep feed available? Would the free ranging take care of their needs?
 
My chickens free range all day at the edge of a forest with lots of forage available to them (berries, nuts, bugs, plants, grass, hay, etc) but I still give them a couple scoops (roughly 4 cups) per day minimum for ~15 birds. If they eat all that I give them another scoop before bed. In the spring and summer they eat less dry food. Right now they are foraging all day and still eating ~6 cups of dry food. I hope this helps.
 
Hi, welcome to the forum! Glad you joined!

Where are you located? In this case I'm more concerned with your climate but your location can come in handy when answering many things. If you modify your profile to show your location it will always be available.

Chickens used to be feral. They took care of themselves with no help from humans. But thousands of years ago some were domesticated. They still mostly took care of themselves but over the centuries they were selectively bred to improve egg laying, meat qualities, or to be more decorative. We started restricting them as to where they could forage for food and moved them to where winters were harsher. Some came to depend on humans more.

I grew up on a small farm in the hills and ridges of East Tennessee. We'd get some nights near or below zero Fahrenheit and some snow, but usually the temperatures and snow were not that harsh. Some chickens slept in trees. If there was snow on the ground we'd toss them some shelled corn but otherwise they fed themselves. Obviously they were not getting many bugs or creepy crawlies during the dead of winter but we had cattle and horses so the chickens could scavenge grain and plants from the hay. They got nutrition from the horse and cow poop. There were a lot of dead vegetation, some if it still had seeds attached. These chickens were not large for their breed, but they stayed healthy. Some pullets even laid some eggs in the dead of winter. Some people will consider us cruel and abusive toward out chickens because we were not pampering them with treats and special conditions but we were poor. The chickens were there to provide eggs and meat, they were not pets. Many small farmers had similar flocks that were treated the same way and those flocks thrived. Think of this. The chickens mostly fed themselves, and you got eggs and meat that did not cost you much of anything. How good does it get?

Many locations, especially in warmer locations, have feral flocks that live year around. Mike Row on Dirty Jobs did an episode on feral chickens in Miami. They were catching them but acknowledged that they would never be able to eradicate them. They are too well adapted to live off of the land there.

I don't know what your winters are like so I don't know how well they can live off of the land where you are. What kind of forage do they have? They will need a variety to get the nutrition they need. Another huge issue is predator pressure. Some people can go years without a predator attack, some will get wiped out pretty quickly if they try free ranging.

Most of us do not have the ability to let our chickens live off of the land. We don't have the climate or forage for it. I don't know what conditions you have. I don't know your goals for them, you are not going to raise show chickens this way. Can your chickens feed themselves? I don't know. The answer for most of us is "no".
 
Even if you live where chickens could forage for enough, they may not be able to feed themselves in the first generations. Feral flocks have learned what to eat and where to find it in different seasons or in different conditions. The chicks learn from the older chickens but if their are no older chickens who know...
 
If my chickens free range every day, do I still need to keep feed available? Would the free ranging take care of their needs?
There are some places where chickens can provide all their needs by free ranging, and many more areas where they cannot. The climate matters, along with the amount of space available, how many chickens are trying to live there, and what other things are living there (plants, animals, bugs, etc.)

There might also be days when the chickens are unable to forage because of a fox in the bushes or a hawk overhead or something like that. It might be something that the chickens notice and people don't.

Personally, I would keep feed available. Chickens usually seem to prefer to eat what they can forage for themselves, but if they can't find enough food they go eat what you provide. I would probably use a complete chicken feed, but I would get the cheapest brand not something expensive, and I would not bother buying any treats to add to it.

The chickens will probably need more feed at some times of the year and less at some other times of the year.
 
In addition to all the above comments, I need to add more information.
Chickens originally came from SE Asia, and were jungle animals, small, and produced maybe thirty eggs each year.
Most of us don't live in a jungle environment, or Miami or Hawaii, and aren't keeping either jungle fowl or small fighting birds, both types who are surviving in those places.
Most chickens that we now have were bred to be larger and produce many more eggs each year, and don't have unlimited access to superior nutrition outdoors.
And we do have plenty of predators almost everywhere! And so many of our birds don't fly well either.
Mary
 
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