I'm contemplating trying one of the feeders at the link below. It would be convenient to dump a whole bag of feed in each feeder for the large laying flock. They go through feed fast enough, and several of them could eat at once from something that large. It seems to have a nice deep trough, and a grill to reduce waste. It comes with a rain guard.
http://www.flemingoutdoors.com/kuhl....html?ref=lexity&_vs=google&_vm=productsearch
(here is a video that gives an indication of the size of the thing ...
)
I'd set that bad boy up on blocks so I could easily remove the poo guard from top one-handed and dump in a bag of feed.
I've also read positive reviews of this feeder ... http://www.premier1supplies.com/detail.php?prod_id=78691&species_id=ALL&criteria=poultry+feeder ... but the pans aren't as deep on it, so I'm not totally sold ...
Right now, this is what's working with my flock ... a PVC pipe cut into a trough with the opening on the top side of the curve, and a handle left uncut across the center point, and I filed the cut edges so everything is smooth.

There I've got wet feed in it, but have set one up with pellets to see if the birds will beak them out, and they don't. For the moment. It is an inexpensive solution, but doesn't hold a lot of feed. I figure if the birds start to beak feed out, I could fashion a grill, though I don't love having the birds rubbing their heads against galvanized wire and would try to find something plastic to work with.
The type of feeders shown in the photo below worked for me for a LONG time, but just recently the birds are spilling feed out of them ... not sure why ... except our pellets are now nice and tiny, so flow into the feeder better than larger pellets or crumbles did (crumbles didn't work in these feeders, either, because they didn't flow). Maybe I could refashion the "trough" portion with only a single row of holes. ??

The trick with the PVC feeders is to keep the feed openings on the top side of the curve, so if birds push food around they can't push it over the edge as easily. This particular example is barely passable in that regard, but it worked well for a long time.
The smaller version of these store-bought round hopper feeders seem okay (5 lbs), but on the larger ones (which were the first feeders we bought) the trough is too shallow and wide and there is no grill, so the birds just nose the feed out. I sat in the coop one day and watched the flock empty 3 of the 30 lb feeders of crumbles, which is a total waste of feed as the birds don't do very well fishing crumbles out of the litter as they do pellets (at that time, the feed I was using didn't come in pellets). YES, I could raise the feeders up a bit so the birds would need to stretch and therefore couldn't push the feed around, but as I'm also feeding younger, smaller birds from the same feeders as much older or taller birds, that would not work for my flock.

I think if those feeders were fashioned with a curved trough, or with a larger lip at the top, then the birds would have a much harder time beaking feed out of them.
I haven't had any better luck with waterers, by the way.
http://www.flemingoutdoors.com/kuhl....html?ref=lexity&_vs=google&_vm=productsearch
(here is a video that gives an indication of the size of the thing ...
I'd set that bad boy up on blocks so I could easily remove the poo guard from top one-handed and dump in a bag of feed.
I've also read positive reviews of this feeder ... http://www.premier1supplies.com/detail.php?prod_id=78691&species_id=ALL&criteria=poultry+feeder ... but the pans aren't as deep on it, so I'm not totally sold ...
Right now, this is what's working with my flock ... a PVC pipe cut into a trough with the opening on the top side of the curve, and a handle left uncut across the center point, and I filed the cut edges so everything is smooth.
There I've got wet feed in it, but have set one up with pellets to see if the birds will beak them out, and they don't. For the moment. It is an inexpensive solution, but doesn't hold a lot of feed. I figure if the birds start to beak feed out, I could fashion a grill, though I don't love having the birds rubbing their heads against galvanized wire and would try to find something plastic to work with.
The type of feeders shown in the photo below worked for me for a LONG time, but just recently the birds are spilling feed out of them ... not sure why ... except our pellets are now nice and tiny, so flow into the feeder better than larger pellets or crumbles did (crumbles didn't work in these feeders, either, because they didn't flow). Maybe I could refashion the "trough" portion with only a single row of holes. ??
The trick with the PVC feeders is to keep the feed openings on the top side of the curve, so if birds push food around they can't push it over the edge as easily. This particular example is barely passable in that regard, but it worked well for a long time.
The smaller version of these store-bought round hopper feeders seem okay (5 lbs), but on the larger ones (which were the first feeders we bought) the trough is too shallow and wide and there is no grill, so the birds just nose the feed out. I sat in the coop one day and watched the flock empty 3 of the 30 lb feeders of crumbles, which is a total waste of feed as the birds don't do very well fishing crumbles out of the litter as they do pellets (at that time, the feed I was using didn't come in pellets). YES, I could raise the feeders up a bit so the birds would need to stretch and therefore couldn't push the feed around, but as I'm also feeding younger, smaller birds from the same feeders as much older or taller birds, that would not work for my flock.
I think if those feeders were fashioned with a curved trough, or with a larger lip at the top, then the birds would have a much harder time beaking feed out of them.
I haven't had any better luck with waterers, by the way.