I just read this old post and had some related thoughts...
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/viewtopic.php?id=98672&p=1
I'm not a survivalist, nor do I live on a coumpound, nor do I think it will ever come to it, BUT: I like knowing that if I woke up one morening and found myself in a Mad Max post-apocalyptic every-man-for-himself world, I'd last a little longer than the other guy
For two years, I've been converting my whole garden to heirloom (non-hybrid) varieties and learning how to save the seeds. I have all the soil I need and I enrich it with home-made compost. I stopped buying Jiffy-Pots every year and now use little plastic pots with real soil to start my seeds in the spring. In short, now that I have the seed, the minimal hardware, and the free water and fertilizer, my garden is totally free and self-sufficient. In theory, I could live in a bubble and still have fresh produce for decades. I certainly don't grow enough to live on; even during the summer; but I sleep better knowing I have the basic skills, knowledge, and equipment, should I ever need to provide for my family.
I want to do the same thing with chickens. I have three laying hens (not quite laying yet) and I only spent around $200 on the coop, feeders, chicks, etc. Now that I'm all set up, I think my only ongoing cost is feed. So if I could produce my own feed, all I would need is a rooster and in theory I could have chickens and eggs well into nuclear winter
Is there a reasonably simple recipe for chicken feed? A related question is this: how can I sufficiantly suppliment my layers' diets wih calcium without buying oyster shells? Feeding them back their own ground shells has to be a net loss, so what did people do before commercially available calcium? For that matter, what do rural African farmers do for this? Or Amish farmers, or Mad Max?
Besides those questions ^ I'd like to know if anyone else has tried this or has any similar thoughts, tips, ideas relating to this.
https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/viewtopic.php?id=98672&p=1
I'm not a survivalist, nor do I live on a coumpound, nor do I think it will ever come to it, BUT: I like knowing that if I woke up one morening and found myself in a Mad Max post-apocalyptic every-man-for-himself world, I'd last a little longer than the other guy

For two years, I've been converting my whole garden to heirloom (non-hybrid) varieties and learning how to save the seeds. I have all the soil I need and I enrich it with home-made compost. I stopped buying Jiffy-Pots every year and now use little plastic pots with real soil to start my seeds in the spring. In short, now that I have the seed, the minimal hardware, and the free water and fertilizer, my garden is totally free and self-sufficient. In theory, I could live in a bubble and still have fresh produce for decades. I certainly don't grow enough to live on; even during the summer; but I sleep better knowing I have the basic skills, knowledge, and equipment, should I ever need to provide for my family.
I want to do the same thing with chickens. I have three laying hens (not quite laying yet) and I only spent around $200 on the coop, feeders, chicks, etc. Now that I'm all set up, I think my only ongoing cost is feed. So if I could produce my own feed, all I would need is a rooster and in theory I could have chickens and eggs well into nuclear winter

Besides those questions ^ I'd like to know if anyone else has tried this or has any similar thoughts, tips, ideas relating to this.