- Apr 19, 2009
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Geese are not strictly herbivores, but they can and do thrive without supplemental grain if you're able to provide them plenty of pasture.
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Geese are not strictly herbivores, but they can and do thrive without supplemental grain if you're able to provide them plenty of pasture.
I don't think grains are bad either (and for the record wasn't trying to say they were). I just think that, in those cases and places when better options for certain flock-raising circumstances present themselves, it's silly to cling blindly to a grain-feeding paradigm if it's not in one's best interest or doesn't serve the common good.
I think we're kind of in agreement, Davaroo. Just as people shouldn't blindly reject the idea of feeding grain, they shouldn't blindly assume that feeding animals must mean feeding them grain. I'm sure there are many good reasons both to feed grain or not to feed grain to various animals, depending ON UNIQUE and often LOCALIZED CIRCUMSTANCES.
Often, for many people, the simple fact that feeding grains requires a significant and regular PURCHASED input is enough of a reason to at least consider other options for carbohydrate ration components!
I don't want anyone to feel defensive about their concious choices, only to question blind assumptions and paradigms that may be ill-suited to their actual needs. One size doesn't fit all when it comes to small-scale farming (including "backyard flocks")--never has, never will.
Works for me. I can see geese, now, running amok on my place.