If feed stores closed and you can’t free range...

Well, for starters I would not be keeping chickens under those circumstances. It's hardly ideal for the birds on a good day.

For my situation, I live in the suburbs and while I have about 1/8th of an acre for them to range in it's not enough to feed them and a big chunk is taken up by gardens.

Every food scrap daily would go to the chickens before it goes into the compost to utilize every calorie. Normally I try to keep food scraps to a certain amount but that would no longer be the case. I have a big supply of oyster shell so I would be relying on that for calcium. I probably have a years worth cause a little goes a long way and I can feed back egg shells.

Then it's mostly a matter of meeting calories and while I could forage some weeds those leafy greens alone won't cut it.

So the first thing I'd do is make a new garden bed asap and fill it with high producing, high nutrition, hardy and vertical plants just for the birds. I'm thinking green beans and peas, corn, and spinach, maybe kale. You can plant those together in the same bed to get a lot of calories in a small space. I'd get that rolling now while I still had feed. I'd be using my heirloom plant seeds I have saved from previous years to do this and they could renew themselves by saving seeds. By utilizing the space vertically and cultivating the land I can get more out of it than I could by letting the chickens forage.

I have a healthy earthworm population in my compost and would then take advantage of that to make a worm farm too. A few sheets of scrap plywood, screws and a drill and anything the chickens didn't eat could go in there for the earthworms. Then the earthworms feed the birds. For me that earthworm farming would look like used rabbit bedding to feed them mostly. The worms here love that stuff and the chickens can't eat it.

I would also probably start taking daily walks to empty properties in my neighborhood and picking weeds. I would focus on high calorie weeds - wild berries, dandelions, clover and grass seed heads.

I'm not certain how long the flock could carry on like that but especially if I was feeding the eggs back to them I think I could get through until winter with ease. It doesn't hurt that I have 2+ months of animal feed at any time anyhow.

Once winter hits I have no idea. I would probably start trapping or hunting and doing fodder indoors. If I plan right I could have storage carrots to feed out. By the time we have no active animal food facilities in the winter I presume the local municipality will be struggling to enforce our local laws about firearms and bows so hunting and trapping will be viable. Real talk I'd probably be feeding me and my dogs that way too.
 
If this thread is helpful to anyone who is experiencing a hardship, be it virus, financial, location, whatever, then be blessed by it in Jesus name.

So what about weeds? They have lots of seeds. Maybe there are some that would be good to cultivate just for the chickens.

Hmmmm! A garden plot of dandelion? Feed them the leaves, the flowers, and those puffy seed heads! What other weeds would be plentiful and a good idea?

Broadleaf plantain. My yard's full of it.
 
I already have a plan for the zombie apocalypse. We'd let the chickens free range and forage (probably not great forage, but 4 acres should suffice for 7 birds). We'd survive off of veggie omelets. But once the end was nigh with zombies closing in, we'd start eating the chickens. Might as well go out with a bbq chicken dinner...

Leave the brains for the zombies.
 
Weeds are all well, good, and useful, but it would be hard to harvest a lot of seeds from scattered crops of weeds, unless the chickens are free-ranging *for themselves. I'd rather invest in seed packets of quick-producing stuff, like sugar beets and kale.
Beet tops, excellent idea! I know they are grown for grazers but hadn't thought about them for chickens. I know my girls like Swiss Chard, carrot greens, spinach, and summer squashes. Those grow fast-ish.

As for seed heads and weeds, I got plenty of those!! In the fall I'm usually in the habit of striping off the seed heads and tossing those out for ther girls instead of scratch or goodies. I suppose enough of them could be added to other items to help boost nutrition.
 
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I do the same thing. Well, I do eliminate beans since those are toxic for chickens. And I know they won’t eat citrus foods like oranges and such, they just don’t like them I guess. But none of that is a problem. That bit goes into the compost pile.
That's so odd. My girls go nuts for leftover black beans. But they're cooked? The beans, not the chickens.
 
That's so odd. My girls go nuts for leftover black beans. But they're cooked? The beans, not the chickens.
Mine like beans too. Regular cooked beans as well as green beans.
You’re right! I’ve just read “don’t feed them beans, they’re toxic...” and I never noticed the art that said “To make them safe for both humans and chickens, beans should be soaked in cold water for at least five hours - preferably longer. Then, discard the water, rinse the beans rinsed thoroughly and boil rapidly in fresh water for at least ten minutes - fifteen to be on the safe side.”
Thank you for making me take a closer look! :clap
 
I was at our local TSC today when one of their employees said that they heard the local Walmart was planning to close. Then the TSC manager was speaking with the employees about the potential for them to close as well.
I bought my usual 100lbs of feed wondering if i should have gotten more just in case.
The grocery store shelves here are bare. There are no cleaning products, cold remedies, paper products, milk, bread, EZ meals, and the beer aisle is a travesty. BUT the fresh produce is still well stocked.
Our grade schools and many colleges in VA have closed.
We aren't panicking yet. We are well supplied with venison and chicken and last year's garden harvest should last until june or july.
Everyone just needs to relax and use your head and practice good hygiene. All these closures and cancellations are just to help slow down the spread of the virus and reduce potential exposure.
As for your alternative feed question, give them cat or dog food and table scraps. A couple weeks of it won't harm them. The guy who gave us our original flock fed them nothing but Ol Roy and he has raised chickens for 30yrs. Do not use your potential meals to feed them. If the hysteria continues, you may need it.
 

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