Quote:
Try the organic threads on the sister forum, Backyard Herds. Or Sufficient Self, where most people have many ideas on living on next to nothing.
For the OP:
I haven't had to worry about contaminated feeds or pet foods in a few years since I make all my animal's foods from scratch.
I feed my flock whole grains, which can be cheaper if you can get them from the farmer or without too many middlemen. I pay an average of $7.50 per 50# and feed whole corn, barley, and oats. You need to switch over gradually, though, if you have been feeding pellets or mash, as the crop is a muscle and it will not be "fit" enough to handle whole grains.....take three weeks to switch over.
Illinois has some snow, so unfortunately, you haven't had enough time to plan ahead. If you can get really creative to get through the winter, you will be home-free once the first bugs and blades of grass show up. The hens seem to find them before we can even see them....they are pretty amazing!
I dry lawn clippings (untreated) and store them in feed sacks for winter greens. I boil up the bones from any chicken or turkey that we eat or that is left from making catfood, and mash them with a potato masher. They LOVE this! And chickens are cannibals, the bones are boiled for hours (24 for chicken, three days for turkey leg bones) so I don't worry about it being chicken. There is hardly a scrap that doesn't go to the critters here.
I have boxes and boxes of those little pumpkins I picked up for free when the nearby farmstand closed. I also have lots of big pumpkins and squashes, but they are not keeping well this year, so I won't be able to count on them much longer. The little ones can often keep until the end of February if I am really diligent about picking them over EVERY week and cooking up any with suspicious spots.
I have a sack of acorns I picked up to experiment with this winter.
I sprout barley, as the protein levels rise dramatically just as the sprouts emerge. I soak all my grains in the winter, as the nutrients become much more bioavailable. If you can get whole barley, you might just do ok with this and scrap greens and veggies from the local grocery.
I do not fill feeders, I toss grain twice a day (once in summer) and make sure it is all cleaned up. The local rodent population can find their food somewhere else!
Hope this helps!
Try the organic threads on the sister forum, Backyard Herds. Or Sufficient Self, where most people have many ideas on living on next to nothing.
For the OP:
I haven't had to worry about contaminated feeds or pet foods in a few years since I make all my animal's foods from scratch.
I feed my flock whole grains, which can be cheaper if you can get them from the farmer or without too many middlemen. I pay an average of $7.50 per 50# and feed whole corn, barley, and oats. You need to switch over gradually, though, if you have been feeding pellets or mash, as the crop is a muscle and it will not be "fit" enough to handle whole grains.....take three weeks to switch over.
Illinois has some snow, so unfortunately, you haven't had enough time to plan ahead. If you can get really creative to get through the winter, you will be home-free once the first bugs and blades of grass show up. The hens seem to find them before we can even see them....they are pretty amazing!
I dry lawn clippings (untreated) and store them in feed sacks for winter greens. I boil up the bones from any chicken or turkey that we eat or that is left from making catfood, and mash them with a potato masher. They LOVE this! And chickens are cannibals, the bones are boiled for hours (24 for chicken, three days for turkey leg bones) so I don't worry about it being chicken. There is hardly a scrap that doesn't go to the critters here.
I have boxes and boxes of those little pumpkins I picked up for free when the nearby farmstand closed. I also have lots of big pumpkins and squashes, but they are not keeping well this year, so I won't be able to count on them much longer. The little ones can often keep until the end of February if I am really diligent about picking them over EVERY week and cooking up any with suspicious spots.
I have a sack of acorns I picked up to experiment with this winter.
I sprout barley, as the protein levels rise dramatically just as the sprouts emerge. I soak all my grains in the winter, as the nutrients become much more bioavailable. If you can get whole barley, you might just do ok with this and scrap greens and veggies from the local grocery.
I do not fill feeders, I toss grain twice a day (once in summer) and make sure it is all cleaned up. The local rodent population can find their food somewhere else!
Hope this helps!