- Thread starter
- #121
I found a source that sells 5 pounds ($12.50) or 25 pounds ($37.50) of faba bean seeds.
325 sq ft per pound of seed x5 pounds =1625 sq ft of field
325 sq ft per pound of seed x25 = 8125 sq ft of field
8125 sq ft is about 1/5 of an acre
Plant 132 pounds of seed per acre
yield, 6.7 tonnes per hectare = 5977 pounds per acre per internet converter
1/5 of an acre might yield 1195 pounds from 25 pounds of seed
soybean oil meal weighs about 4 oz per cup
A standard commercial diet is about 1/4 c per day per hen or 1 c per day for 4 hens
360 cups per year divided by 4 to get pounds is 90 pounds
Conclusion: 5 or 10 pounds of seed should do it. If I harvest beans. This assumes favorable weather, favorable soil, and that the learning curve to growing it isn't too steep. And, of course, it assumes the deer are fenced out.
It doesn't like sand very well and that is what I have, mostly, especially in the fields that are more ready to plant this spring.
Also, the protein profile is very similar to soybeans - good in many ways but also very low in MET.
My time is better spent on other options this year. Enough of the other options will also be the first time to try them.
I might plant a small block of them just to see how they do.
As always, do your own math, this is not only very rough but it is also likely to have mistakes.
325 sq ft per pound of seed x5 pounds =1625 sq ft of field
325 sq ft per pound of seed x25 = 8125 sq ft of field
8125 sq ft is about 1/5 of an acre
Plant 132 pounds of seed per acre
yield, 6.7 tonnes per hectare = 5977 pounds per acre per internet converter
1/5 of an acre might yield 1195 pounds from 25 pounds of seed
soybean oil meal weighs about 4 oz per cup
A standard commercial diet is about 1/4 c per day per hen or 1 c per day for 4 hens
360 cups per year divided by 4 to get pounds is 90 pounds
Conclusion: 5 or 10 pounds of seed should do it. If I harvest beans. This assumes favorable weather, favorable soil, and that the learning curve to growing it isn't too steep. And, of course, it assumes the deer are fenced out.
It doesn't like sand very well and that is what I have, mostly, especially in the fields that are more ready to plant this spring.
Also, the protein profile is very similar to soybeans - good in many ways but also very low in MET.
My time is better spent on other options this year. Enough of the other options will also be the first time to try them.
I might plant a small block of them just to see how they do.
As always, do your own math, this is not only very rough but it is also likely to have mistakes.
Last edited: