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- #11
FrankHomestead
Songster
I'm curious as to how you get to 18% protein. I'm seeing a couple of ingredients such as the split peas and flax seeds that chickens do not hold in high regard.
I didn't mean that the feed will CONTAIN more protein, I meant that more of it will be absorbed by the chickens because fermented feed is more readily digested, at least that is what I've read time and time again. I forgot to mention my chickens forage all day, every day in their tractor, so they are also getting grass, weeds, bugs etc. I came up with the protein content by researching each individual grain & seed. I agree that chickens don't normally care for peas dried, but my chickens devour them when fermented. I would love to hear more feedback and opinions, as I'm really on the fence now. Clearly I'm doing something wrong when they look about a month younger than their actual age!
I also disagree that fermenting feed increases overall protein. The yeasts and bacteria responsible for the fermentation process themselves may posses protein but they also consume sugars and protein to ferment the feed. Saying that non fermented feed with a 18% protein contains more protein after being consumed by decomposers in the food chain is something I can't buy into. Poultry feed is not unique. It can not have more value at the end than at the beginning.
Production poultry are bred to churn out eggs. Chickens are not vegetarians. They are omnivores. A significant portion of their diet in a free range environment would come from animal proteins.
There are some tasks we have a cost advantage on and some we don't. We can't make a balanced feed as cheaply and we don't have the research staff and equipment to determine if the feed consumed is a balanced one.
I would suggest purchasing a commercial feed and then supplementing it with your own scratch. The scratch contributes to a larger more muscular gizzard which in turns allows the chickens to extract more nutrients from their mash or pellet feed.
I have close to 50 chickens in my flock. One fifty pound bag of commercial feed lasts 10 days when supplemented with my own scratch. I have marans and meat birds mixed. The marans start laying on schedule off and on right at 22 weeks. I'm starting to butcher the heritage meat birds (roosters) this weekend.
I have a pdf on my laptop that lists poultry feeds and protein content. I will post it when I get back there this evening.