Okay here is a question for which I will be kicked in the knickers....The Layer Pellet thing..
Pellets are just crumbles forced back together into a recognizable shape. It requires extra equipment and processes, which is why its often more expensive than crumble. The advantage is in waste - your birds are less likely to throw pellets far from the feeder than crumble, and are more likely to "discover" (and then eat) it after they've thrown it from the feeder. The other advantage is situational. Crumble tends to clog gravity fed feeders, and is more prone to clumping up in high moisture/high humidity environments. If those don't apply to you, that benefit isn't likely worth the extra cost.
I used pellet for quite some time in my early flock raising, mostly for the reduced waste, easier to clean up later aspects. and because I have gravity feeders (which I no longer use, except in emergency/planned absence.
Now, because farmers as a lot tend to be frugal, smart, and practical - or they don't stay farmers long - someone long ago discovered if you make crumble wet, not merely damp - you can create an oatmeal-like consistency that greatly reduces waste (but still isn't suitable for gravity feeders). That's what I do now. More often than not, mine ferments, as I make three five gallon buckets at a time, and usually run thru them in about a week - that has other asserted benefits in availability of B vitamins, but in any case, given my relatively hot environment, I found wet food or wet mash helped my flock's **apparent** health overall. That's an anecdote, not data.
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