NeoHomesteader
Chirping
- May 7, 2020
- 39
- 53
- 96
This is not a fully 'hatched' out plan, i'm just 'scratching' out the details. I will 'peck' and choose what works best for me.
Problems with store bought feed.
'Spensive.+++
Attracts flies!! (new to me)++
Smells bad. (Actually I think most of the bad odor of a flock can be attributed to the feed)++
Lots of left over bags, and me with out a shed that needs a wrap.+
Problems with not buying store feed.
Chickens die ---------
Chickens are malnourished----
Chickens dont lay enough--
More pluses or minuses indicates severity.
So I live in Jersey, sandy loam soil. Slightly acidic water. Lots of pine on property.
Laid off our flock for the last two years and came back hard this year. 50 new chickens (~15 weeks, our 4 year old lady just passed last week), 2 turkeys, 3 guinea (4 months) and a dozen keets and 5 Muscovy white adults ( last year addition) and now about 30 Muscovy ducklings (half from ours, half from the brown muscovy guy down the road) with one Peking duck and uh the black one. Cov something (19?) EDIT: Cayuga maybe? Chick is black not green.
I read about compost feeding. But that requires getting trash from local organic restaurants/ grocers etc. We don't make enough garbage to feed our army. I tried throwing a compost pile in our new pasture. Chickens tore it apart before it had a chance , and we just threw a F350 bedload of straw and bedding back into the woods because WTF.
So I thought. I have some cleared land that isn't being used by our flock or us. Just an empty field. What If I grew some corn (cause, hey fattening food, makes cows taste yummy). Simple, low maintenance. Could probably just knock it down and let the birds go at it. Till it all up in to the soil and let it fertilize itself for next year. (no idea not a farmer)
Then I thought, we have been looking at protein levels, and vitamins and crap for the ducklings, gotta maintain certain protein levels for the turkeys to bulk up, not too much for the ducks so they don't angel wing, enough niacin so they don't i don't know pigeon foot or something. Combine that with indian growing.. Corn, squash and beans. so they compliment each other. Then hey beans are vegetable protein sources...corn has some fat in it, and "winter" squash is high in... salt. (well potassium, a salt)
So beans can provide the protein levels. Corn provides fat content. "Free ranging" provides niacin and other vitamins as long as we keep chicken separate from other flocks. Since chicken are more scratch and destroy.. no matter how much area you give them, it becomes dirt. You put food in a bowl and they scratched down to bedrock 10 feet around that bowl....
Okay then I think... BYC is so smart they have probably already thought about this. ...
So.. homesteaders, tinkerers, farmers... what ya got?
TIA
Problems with store bought feed.
'Spensive.+++
Attracts flies!! (new to me)++
Smells bad. (Actually I think most of the bad odor of a flock can be attributed to the feed)++
Lots of left over bags, and me with out a shed that needs a wrap.+
Problems with not buying store feed.
Chickens die ---------
Chickens are malnourished----
Chickens dont lay enough--
More pluses or minuses indicates severity.
So I live in Jersey, sandy loam soil. Slightly acidic water. Lots of pine on property.
Laid off our flock for the last two years and came back hard this year. 50 new chickens (~15 weeks, our 4 year old lady just passed last week), 2 turkeys, 3 guinea (4 months) and a dozen keets and 5 Muscovy white adults ( last year addition) and now about 30 Muscovy ducklings (half from ours, half from the brown muscovy guy down the road) with one Peking duck and uh the black one. Cov something (19?) EDIT: Cayuga maybe? Chick is black not green.
I read about compost feeding. But that requires getting trash from local organic restaurants/ grocers etc. We don't make enough garbage to feed our army. I tried throwing a compost pile in our new pasture. Chickens tore it apart before it had a chance , and we just threw a F350 bedload of straw and bedding back into the woods because WTF.
So I thought. I have some cleared land that isn't being used by our flock or us. Just an empty field. What If I grew some corn (cause, hey fattening food, makes cows taste yummy). Simple, low maintenance. Could probably just knock it down and let the birds go at it. Till it all up in to the soil and let it fertilize itself for next year. (no idea not a farmer)
Then I thought, we have been looking at protein levels, and vitamins and crap for the ducklings, gotta maintain certain protein levels for the turkeys to bulk up, not too much for the ducks so they don't angel wing, enough niacin so they don't i don't know pigeon foot or something. Combine that with indian growing.. Corn, squash and beans. so they compliment each other. Then hey beans are vegetable protein sources...corn has some fat in it, and "winter" squash is high in... salt. (well potassium, a salt)
So beans can provide the protein levels. Corn provides fat content. "Free ranging" provides niacin and other vitamins as long as we keep chicken separate from other flocks. Since chicken are more scratch and destroy.. no matter how much area you give them, it becomes dirt. You put food in a bowl and they scratched down to bedrock 10 feet around that bowl....
Okay then I think... BYC is so smart they have probably already thought about this. ...
So.. homesteaders, tinkerers, farmers... what ya got?
TIA