I've heard no onions or avocado. I'm not sure why.
I hadn't heard that onions are bad but I did hear that large amounts of the avocado skin is toxic. Also, raw potato skin is toxic.
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I've heard no onions or avocado. I'm not sure why.
I wait a week before giving anything but chick food, after a week I give them some grit and a few minutes later a little bit of something green, lettuce, spinach, turnip tops..stuff like that. It's better to give them grit and them not have needed it then to need it and have none in their gizzard. We use straw hay for bedding, and I like to give chicks grit because they will inevitably eat some of the straw...that stuff can sometimes cause some issues, but with grit no issues. Don't give it free choice, just sprinkle a little on their food once in a while..not everyday, but maybe every third day...they make chick grit. I got a tiny bag and it very well might last forever.I'm new to this and trying to be as prepared as possible when the chicks arrive. I have a few questions about treats for baby chicks. I'm going to be tempted to spoil them right away and I want to do it in a way that won't harm them!
1. Is it better to wait as long as possible, at least to a week? I know things like hard boiled eggs have good protein, is that ok to give sooner?
2. Is it better to start them on soft treats that don't need grit, like yogurt and hard boiled eggs? What's the rule of thumb for what needs grit- if you could eat it without teeth, they can eat it without grit? Anything you'd give to a baby without teeth? Can they eat spaghetti without grit?
3. When's a good time to introduce foods that do need grit, and the grit itself?
4. When feeding yogurt, does it have to be a plain variety? I've seen pictures of adult hens eating what looked like blueberry yogurt. Can it be flavored? would chunks of fruit require grit?
Any more suggestions for favorite treats, and do they need grit, or not? I know about hard boiled eggs, yogurt, spaghetti and bugs (which do need grit, i know). I know people suggest oatmeal- is this cooked or raw?
grass yes, dandelions--yes...spearmint, not so much..I know adult chickens won't usually eat much off of plants in the mint family...and spearmint is obviously part of that genus.My chicks are 1 week old, what about giving them grass clippings or dendelion flowers or a couple of spriggs from a spearmint plant?