(I didn't want to click one more time to go somewhere else to viewThere are plenty of pictures in @gtaus' article »My $10 Inexpensive DIY Fodder Tower with Dollar Tree Dish Bins« and my »Fodder Album«.

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(I didn't want to click one more time to go somewhere else to viewThere are plenty of pictures in @gtaus' article »My $10 Inexpensive DIY Fodder Tower with Dollar Tree Dish Bins« and my »Fodder Album«.
I've grown fodder for years and know how they eat it but I can't seem to get it to grow mold free. So I'm thinking of growing it greens only in the future.
Fodder is awesome!
Have you seen This video?
- I flood the tower only once a day, not twice, so the grains stay much drier.
I can only assume, but 65F is way warmer than my garage, which is in the mid to upper 40's. Since the temperatures have dropped i have fewer issues with mold, and the few white spots i sometimes have in the bins disappear after two days in the bright sun. I let the bins green up for two days in our dining room window, facing straight south. The wheat literally explodes into green leaves, destroying the mold entirely.
At least give us some »Soylent Green« biscuits…![]()
Hydrogen Peroxide! - That is an excellent idea! H2O2 works much better against mold spores than chlorine, to be exact, Oxygen radicals destroy fungi much better than Chlorine radicals do. Chlorine is more efficient against bacteria though.No doubt I don't want to feed anything moldy to my chickens, either. I have had good luck with barley seed and almost no mold growth at all. I tried growing some wheat fodder but that had a lot of mold - so I had to adjust the amount of grain I used in the bin and I also used a capful of bleach in both the initial soaking the twice daily watering. That seems to have corrected the mold problem with the wheat fodder, but it was a trial and error approach.
I just switched to growing barley fodder again, so I hope the mold issue will not be present. I really had good luck with my barley seed last year.
On a different recent thread, there is a guy who is using Hydrogen Peroxide instead of bleach to control mold and he is reporting good results. That may be another option to consider. If I can find that thread again, I'll post a link.
1.5 pound of wheat per bin! - I am using 250 grams, that is a bit more than ½ pound. When i put much more into a bin, the root mat becomes so thick that the ducks can't tear it apart.I got my wheat fodder mold issue under control after the first batch. I think I was using too much wheat in the bin. In that first batch, I was using 1.5 pounds of wheat seed per bin. The seeds seemed to remain damper, longer, between flooding the tower twice a day. When I reduced the wheat seed to 1 pound per bin, the seeds dried out between flooding better. So, that, and using a bit of bleach, my wheat fodder mold issue was solved.
I like the approach of maybe only flooding the tower once a day. The trick, of course, is to not let the seeds completely dry out and stop the fodder from growing.
Yeah! Mold! - I have new problem with my fodder "ripening" in the dining room window: Fruit flies! Since late autumn we have some kind of a fruit fly / ladybug pandemic here in the area. The ladybugs have all died or been eaten by the ducks and i though we finally got rid of the fruit-flies after the first frosty nights, but now they have discovered the fodder bins in the window.Yes, last year when you mentioned that you were finishing off the fodder in front of your dining room window, I set up a small three bin tower in front of my south facing kitchen window to let my fodder finish off (no watering). I found that those 3 days allowed my bins to dry out well while still allowing the grass to grow. That was a real benefit to my situation here in northern Minnesota because on those -20F days, the fodder was drier and did not freeze up like a green popsicle - so the chickens could eat it all up before it was frozen.
I have also noticed that small amounts of mold seem to vanish when exposed to the sunlight, which is great in the fodder bins. I also want to mention that when I grew my first batch of wheat fodder and had to throw it on top of the compost bin because of all the mold, I went out a few days latter and discovered that all the white mold had died. So, I guess sunlight is truly the best disinfectant!
1.5 pound of wheat per bin! - I am using 250 grams, that is a bit more than ½ pound. When i put much more into a bin, the root mat becomes so thick that the ducks can't tear it apart.