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Yeah, my DH's late mother and grandmother did the same. The chickens, chicks and adults, got kitchen scraps and maybe a handful of cracked corn now and then; that's it. However, his mom and grandma weren't concerned about optimal health for their chickens. If one died, they replaced it or not, depending on how many chickens they had at the time. I'm not saying that's how your ancestors did it, just what DH's family did.
My chickens are more pets than anything else. They have feeders full every day, even though they free range for most of their diet. They also have misters and fan cooled coops, something else his mom would never have done. Her chickens were lucky to get a coop at all. Back then the dogs were lucky to get a commercial food and the farm cats had to depend on what they could catch for themselves. Just a different time I guess.
Yeah, my DH's late mother and grandmother did the same. The chickens, chicks and adults, got kitchen scraps and maybe a handful of cracked corn now and then; that's it. However, his mom and grandma weren't concerned about optimal health for their chickens. If one died, they replaced it or not, depending on how many chickens they had at the time. I'm not saying that's how your ancestors did it, just what DH's family did.
My chickens are more pets than anything else. They have feeders full every day, even though they free range for most of their diet. They also have misters and fan cooled coops, something else his mom would never have done. Her chickens were lucky to get a coop at all. Back then the dogs were lucky to get a commercial food and the farm cats had to depend on what they could catch for themselves. Just a different time I guess.