garden help! growing food for chickens

Have you tried those hanging upside down tomato planters before? I wonder if that would help with your blight issue, you essentially grow the tomato plant upside down from any hook that you would hang like a hanging flower basket on the porch etc. you get a lot of air flow that way and they're off the ground I wonder if that would help it all!
Yes. One year I tried upside down. Like I said somewhere else, we tried everything. Blight is just thick in this area I guess.
 
Besides all the great suggestions already posted, I'll throw out some barley, wheat, mustard, clover, chamomile, and alfalfa seeds in a protected area. Then when the sprouts are 3-4" tall and nicely leafed, I'll let the ladies in to munch on the greens. I do this a few times a year.
I'm trying some chamomile this year! Currently putting the seeds through a month of cold stratification before I start them. Any tips for it?
 
Hi all!
I'm a persistently failing gardener lol. I've tried on/off for years with minimal success, but I'm determined! We've got 3 acres and the majority of it is cleared, usable land. Seems silly not to produce more than eggs with that space! Last year we fenced in a 20' x 50' garden. (We live in the woods of Pennsylvania with very high activity of deer, racoons, rabbits, etc) I planted a few things but it was mostly left empty and filled up with weeds. This year I'm determined to grow more food!
However... I'm 85% carnivore. Meaning, I eat very little plant foods. I will still grow the basic tomatoes and peppers for cooking, and I'll do pumpkins for fall. I planted some new elderberry shrubs last year and I hope to expand those.
What would you grow specifically for feeding chickens? We have a flock of 10 hens right now and I would like to use the garden to supplement their feed.
(I'm zone 6B and because our property is a clearing in old tall woods, our direct sunlight hours are kinda short.)
Greens greens greens! Most any type of greens for chickens is great, and variety is best. I usually grow kale, lettuce, beet turnips radish and carrot (the root vegetables never get very big because the chickens are eating the leaves all year, but the bit of root that survives helps it to keep regrowing.
The other main one i would do is beans/peas, excellent supplementation for the chickens. As a bonus, all of those are good in partial sun!
You can also pick and dry the leaves then store them for winter, then toss them into warm water for a bit and bring out when they cant forage. My chickens loved that this winter when they couldnt free range.
I also grow butternut squash, it's more prolific and vitamin rich than pumpkin. And the chickens LOVE it, they eat it right off the vine while they grow, and if any survive to ripeness they can last a full 8mo on a dark shelf! The seeds make excellent chicken treats middle winter (same nutrients as pumpkin seeds) while you can make yummy pumpkin pie. 😋
 

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