You can can those right up if you want. My Mom used to can them in thick slices stacked in the jar so she could use them for fried green tomatoes later on.
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Or not.Some chickens like easy food and don't forage as well as others, so the ones that want and like that easy food will still be eating at the feeder all day long, with little forays out to peck and scratch but it won't be serious foraging.
They aren't going to die if you take away the food and send them out in the big bad world to work for their tucker, no weaning necessary. Just open the door and let 'em go and don't give them feed until they've hunted all day. After they learn to do what comes natural as a way of life, you'll start to see some real savings on feed.
Nice!!!! Don't you hate running the wood stove and having to open windows too?![]()
We tweaked our barrel stove last year for the same reason....my Dad had designed it for hot fires and more hot fires, but with not much control over that or for wood conservation. Mother and I decided it was time for a change with that, so we changed out barrels, moved and reduced the stovepipe so that all the heat wasn't roaring up that huge chimney, then added a collar with a damper in it. Soooooo much better in all ways now but still a cheap stove to have/maintain/tweak.
So I have been running an experiment with my chickens. I have 3 ages so it was fairly simple. I split all 3 age groups into 2 groups. Half of each group has been free ranging from sun up to sun down with feed available all day. The other is on a very strict diet of only store bought feed.
My purpose for this was to see how the birds grow better. Well hands down the free ranging birds win. The 2 months Olds are huge and fully feathered, the teens are laying already and the "old" hens look great with minimal feather loss and still laying daily. My "feed only" group looks blah. The 2 months Olds are small and still not fully feathered, the teens are not laying yet and skinny and the "old hens" have Pink combs horrible feather loss and lower egg production.
My conclusion!!!! Grow forage and fodder and any kind of bug farm I can over winter. Catch mice and other critters that my flock eats in warm months and feed during winter. Chickens (at least mine) can not thrive fully on a factory feed.
WELL DONE! HATS OFF TO YOU FOR STEPPING OUT, AND PUTTING PROCESSED FEED (with all of the backing of advertisers stating it is developed to "meet all of the nutritional needs" of a chicken) TO THE TEST!So I have been running an experiment with my chickens. I have 3 ages so it was fairly simple. I split all 3 age groups into 2 groups. Half of each group has been free ranging from sun up to sun down with feed available all day. The other is on a very strict diet of only store bought feed.
My purpose for this was to see how the birds grow better. Well hands down the free ranging birds win. The 2 months Olds are huge and fully feathered, the teens are laying already and the "old" hens look great with minimal feather loss and still laying daily. My "feed only" group looks blah. The 2 months Olds are small and still not fully feathered, the teens are not laying yet and skinny and the "old hens" have Pink combs horrible feather loss and lower egg production.
My conclusion!!!! Grow forage and fodder and any kind of bug farm I can over winter. Catch mice and other critters that my flock eats in warm months and feed during winter. Chickens (at least mine) can not thrive fully on a factory feed.
Well I know my family of 7 all have very different nutrition needs. Some for weight control, some for extra vitamin or mineral and some to support the meds they take. If 7 humans have such various needs how on earth can over 100 chickens all thrive on the exact same diet. Not possible. The only thing my flock isn't given is processed human food, I don't feed it to my kids either.WELL DONE! HATS OFF TO YOU FOR STEPPING OUT, AND PUTTING PROCESSED FEED (with all of the backing of advertisers stating it is developed to "meet all of the nutritional needs" of a chicken) TO THE TEST!
Can you explain this? Certainly one can't be sure what chickens eat when ranging but if you're talking of purposely feeding mice to chickens that is very dangerous and unhealthy.So I have been running an experiment with my chickens. I have 3 ages so it was fairly simple. I split all 3 age groups into 2 groups. Half of each group has been free ranging from sun up to sun down with feed available all day. The other is on a very strict diet of only store bought feed.
My purpose for this was to see how the birds grow better. Well hands down the free ranging birds win. The 2 months Olds are huge and fully feathered, the teens are laying already and the "old" hens look great with minimal feather loss and still laying daily. My "feed only" group looks blah. The 2 months Olds are small and still not fully feathered, the teens are not laying yet and skinny and the "old hens" have Pink combs horrible feather loss and lower egg production.
My conclusion!!!! Grow forage and fodder and any kind of bug farm I can over winter. Catch mice and other critters that my flock eats in warm months and feed during winter. Chickens (at least mine) can not thrive fully on a factory feed.