- May 13, 2014
- 1
- 0
- 6
Another solution to your problem could be to elevated your feeder to where the have to reach to get it. When using this method they eat less and they also waste less
Last edited:
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
for chicks try gring feed with coffee grinder and mix yogurt to make a runny paste less cosumption no waste after 3 to 7 days ferment their starter no waste better nutrition healtier cheeper chickens everybodys goal all methods work better with pasture free range or tractor
Quote:
No, I do not believe that I described culling my hen by removing her from the breeding pool.![]()
Let's go back and keep my complete post all together so that the context of clear because when you quoted me for your posting you removed portions of the conversation making the context unclear so you could make a point that I don't feel is true.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
My original post in context:
Quote:
Your reply to me is:
what you just described is culling the hen. Removing it from your breeding pool.
My new comment:
"... not breed hens...." (which are my words) is not the same as culling. I did not describe culling ... based on my understanding of the meanings of the word.
My hen, who wastes feed, is not removed in any way, nor is she selected in any way nor is she killed. She happily stays with the flock and nothing happens to her nor changes for her. Her life is still blissful.Well, 'cept I steal her eggs for eatin' when she's not lookin'.![]()
I will not be collecting her eggs for the incubator. Since I can tell her egg from others, her eggs aren't selected for incubation. This is not a description of culling based on my understanding of the word cull. Of course, we don't have to agree on how to use the word cull, but I don't want my post to be misunderstoodsince I am not culling her.![]()
My hen sticks around, and I try to mitigate the of loss of feed by having the flock free range and I also put the feeder up on blocks when they are out on grass. It also works to our advantage that almost all chickens prefer to eat off the ground for some portion of the day even when a full feeder is available, so the feed that Sonnie tosses on the ground outside, often gets eaten by others. But now I'm wandering off into another topic altogether.![]()
Had the same problem...exactly !! LOL....lifted my feeder up on a brick so it would be above where they scratched thru the shavings. Finally to them out into a kennel and hung the feeder from a board...high enough for them to reach it ..almost head level. But yep, they drove me crazy with all the waste and having to clear out the shavings to get to the food!!!!My 8 8 week old chicks have one of those feeders that has the little feeding holes around the bottom and a jar on top. I used that for my last batch of chickens and never remember them wasting a lot of food....my recent guys, however, are spilling it left and right! There is as much food as there is shavings in there! It doesn't help that one of them perches on top of the food, I suppose. My question is - how do I stop them from wasting it and can I let them just eat the food that is in the bedding?
I did not remove anything to make a point. Cull does not mean kill, it means that animal is not included in the breeding pool of the breeding program.No, I do not believe that I described culling my hen by removing her from the breeding pool.![]()
Let's go back and keep my complete post all together so that the context of clear because when you quoted me for your posting you removed portions of the conversation making the context unclear so you could make a point that I don't feel is true.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
My original post in context:
Your reply to me is:
My new comment:
"... not breed hens...." (which are my words) is not the same as culling. I did not describe culling ... based on my understanding of the meanings of the word.
My hen, who wastes feed, is not removed in any way, nor is she selected in any way nor is she killed. She happily stays with the flock and nothing happens to her nor changes for her. Her life is still blissful.Well, 'cept I steal her eggs for eatin' when she's not lookin'.
I will not be collecting her eggs for the incubator. Since I can tell her egg from others, her eggs aren't selected for incubation. This is not a description of culling based on my understanding of the word cull. Of course, we don't have to agree on how to use the word cull, but I don't want my post to be misunderstoodsince I am not culling her.
My hen sticks around, and I try to mitigate the of loss of feed by having the flock free range and I also put the feeder up on blocks when they are out on grass. It also works to our advantage that almost all chickens prefer to eat off the ground for some portion of the day even when a full feeder is available, so the feed that Sonnie tosses on the ground outside, often gets eaten by others. But now I'm wandering off into another topic altogether. :/