How much do you spend per month on feed for your small flock???

Ways to cut costs on feeding chickens, KaylaBird?


Well, that should be an entire independent thread altogether.


But here are a few ideas of things that I do:


1, I have friends who live out on farms outside the city. So I am able to get some of their unsellable produce in the summer, and feed it to my chickens. For example, one friend has a small roadside market, and he often gets locally grown watermelon that break or crack in transit, or else are oddly shaped, or have a small bad spot in them, or in some other way are not perfect enough to sell. So he saves those blemished or oddball watermelon for my chickens. Do you really think my chickens care if the watermelon is not 100% pretty and perfect? I, in return, bring this farmer friend a dozen country fresh eggs (or even two dozen, if I have enough) when I go to pick up his discard melons.

I have a dairy farming friend who gives me old raw milk for the chickens, and who lets me clean up spilled alfalfa after the cows have eaten at the alfalfa blocks.


2, When I cut the grass, I bag the fresh grass clippings and throw them over into the chicken yard. The chickens eat some of the grass (and any bugs that are in with that grass debris), which helps me reduce the feed bill. The rest they scratch in, poop in, and ultimately turn into compost. After they have scratched and played in these grass clippings for a month or two, I purposefully age this manure/grass muxture for about a half of a year in a compost pile. After this manure/grass mixture has aged sufficiently, I add it to my vegetable garden bed. It's the best fertilizer you can put on a garden, and saves me alot of money when I don't have to go buy fertilizer at the gardening store.


The chickens will eat the parts of most vegetable plants that humans do not eat -- things like the leaves of the bean plants, the huge outer leaves of cabbage plants, etc.


Same thing with the weeds that I pull out of the vegetable garden -- my chickens LOVE fresh, green weeds.


You just have to make sure you don't feed them the leaves from tomato, pepper, potato or eggplants. These are called "nightshade" plants, and although their fruits are safe to eat, their leaves, stems and roots are not. Humans as well as chickens can be poisoned if they eat the leaves, stems or roots of these plants.


And don't feed them mushrooms, because they are poisonous too.


3, I take kitchen vegetable scraps (like the outer leaves of cabbages, the greenery off of the carrot, etc) and give that to the chickens to save money.


4, If I have more eggs than I can use, then I boil some of those eggs, cut the boiled egg up, and give them chopped egg as a treat. They LOVE boiled egg treats.


5, If I have whole wheat bread that has gotten stale before my family eats it, then I break it up and give the stale bread to the chickens. I do not buy, nor would I ever feed my chickens, white bread or anything that is made with white flour. But bread made with whole wheat is nutritious, and if it is too stale for my family to eat, there is always the chickens.


6, When I can, I sell extra eggs and use that money to buy more feed for the chickens. That doesn't reduce the cost of the feed itself, but it does reduce the impact of their feed on my overall household budget.


I haven't done it yet, but you can take wheat seeds (whole wheat berries from whatever source you have) and sprout them, and feed your chickens the sprouts. It takes fewer sprouts to fill a chicken than the unsprouted wheat seed, so it is a cheap and very healthy way to extend the food.
 
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OK, somebody mentioned the cost of cage bedding.


I had forgotten about that cost, but they are right. Most folks (including myself, until recently) buy bedding for the floor of their henhouse.


I used to. I have a 13 foot by 7 and 1/2 foot henhouse, and was using about one clean bale of pine shavings (at a cost of $3.75 a bale) about every 10 days or so.


But I don't spend anything on bedding anymore, other than a little bit of gasoline.


Now I go down to a place in a neighboring county where they dump all of the autumn leaves that the county leaf vacuuming trucks have collected. They just dump all of this leaf debris in huge piles on a public piece of land, and people can take whatever they want.


I get the leaf debris by the pick up truck load full and bring it home. Some I use for bedding in my henhouse. The rest I use as mulch in my organic vegetable garden.


The chickens love to scratch and play in the crushed autumn leaves, and it saves me the money of having to buy all those bales of pine shavings.
 
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Barry said: ((You just have to make sure you don't feed them the leaves from tomato, pepper, potato or eggplants. These are called "nightshade" plants, and although their fruits are safe to eat, their leaves, stems and roots are not. Humans as well as chickens can be poisoned if they eat the leaves, stems or roots of these plants.))


I know people say that about tomato leaves but...I didn't know that and fed my girls whole tomato plants that were wilting at the end of summer. Like, 4 hens got 3 full size plants to munch on and all are alive and well some 2+ months later? I think tomato plants are not poisonous or my girls wouldn't still be clucking.
 
I have 13 bo pullets and they go thru about 70 lbs of feed a month. I get their layer feed from rural king in 40 lb bags 8.50 a bag but also give them boss and cracked corn every day along with kitchen scraps so i would say about 20 dollors a month to feed them during the cold weather.
I also sell enough eggs to pay for their food and treats so I'm at least breaking even if you don't count the cost of the coop and feeders that will take awhile to recoup .
In the summer when they free range with more to eat my feed bill is probably 30-35 % less.
 
We have six RIR and go through a 50 lb bag of layer feed every month as well ... having a small flock of chickens for us is a labor of love
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we get the greatest pleasure from getting the freshest eggs
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and the best entertainment
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(we sit and watch them for hours on end) ... between the cost of the coop and stuff like pine shavings, DE, oyster shells, etc ... the cost for our eggs is way up there .... but soooo worth every penny
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We have 16 layers.

I spend approx. $33/month on Layer feed, $10/month on BOSS, $10/month on scratch, scramble up the "poopie" eggs for the girls and give them left over kitchen treats from our dinner table.

We make $15/week on the eggs we sell, use and give the rest to family weekly. That covers their feed but the original cost and set up of their coop may take a while to re-coop.
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Edit: 52 years old and I still can't spell for doodlie
 
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We have 9 chickens total and go thru 1 bag of flock raiser a month and they aren't even laying yet so it doesn't balance out, but they are all pets in a way.
The 4 egg layers will be providing the 3 humans with enough eggs (when they start laying), but if we sold them we wouldn't be making enough $$ to equal the cost of feed now. Even the 5 smaller breeds will lay eventually, but their eggs will be of a smaller size so it'll take 2 eggs to equal a ex-large store bought.
We didn't get chickens to sell their eggs, they will mostly be for our use (farm fresh eggs taste so much better than 3week old store bought eggs).
So at that time I could calculate the difference between what we buy in eggs a week to what we collect from the chickens. But I don't think it'll be where we are saving having chickens.
 
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I have 2 hens. A 50 pound sack of Layena lasts 2 months and costs 13.50. I give them treats from the garden in weeds, broccoli and cabbage leaves, lettuce and tomatoes. I give them shrimp shells which they love. Shrimp shells make the yolks creamy when boiled instead of crumbly and make the best deviled eggs we ever tasted. We enjoy our girls and they also get leftovers and kitchen trimmings. In the spring, we will get a few more hens.
 
I have 40 birds and I spend between 45 and 60 per month depending on rising and falling costs...
 

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