brendaanddaveriley
In the Brooder
- May 11, 2020
- 38
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PS. Here's a basic list of things to feed chickens and to raise in your garden to feed chickens:Sorry but I disagree with part of that 9 point list and I'd like to elaborate on a couple of the points. Old timer chicken raisers like my Mom who as far as I can remember kept chickens and never had a sick one always feed the potato peelings to the chickens. Now I'll grant you our potatoes never stuck around long enough to turn green and my own chickens much prefer that I fry those peelings up and then let them cool before they devour them, so just to clarify, I think potato is fine as long it's not green (you shouldn't eat the green either) but if you peel the green off, wash and cook the potato it's fine for you or your chickens. They will like them better and eat, if not all, the most of the potato if you cook and cool it first. TIP: try frying up even the peelings for them, especially in your left over bacon grease, they love 'em. As with anything, in moderation.
Secondly, beans, peas, or any legume is fine for them as long as it is cooked so as not to expand in their craw.
Dairy, totally disagree! We made buttermilk, butter, farmer's cheese, and yogurt and always gave any we couldn't get to, to the chickens and pigs. In moderation. Try mixing it with left over breads or "COOKED" RICE. Again in moderation.
It's been my experience that their instincts pretty much tell them what they shouldn't eat and even then their different personalities "and believe they all have their own" will also govern what they will eat and what they won't. Good Luck and don't worry too much as chickens are not that fragile.
Poultry:
- Cooked summer and winter squash
- Cooked or raw root vegetables
- Milk from our cow and whey from cheesemaking
- Bugs and worms if birds are allowed to free range
- Painted Mountain corn
- Sunflower seeds
- Pumpkin seeds
- Flax seeds
- Kitchen scraps
- Weeds