New Goslings!

Rosie42892

Chirping
6 Years
Mar 29, 2013
137
15
83
Hello!
I curently have 3, week old cayuga ducklings. Next week I will be receiving day old Toulouse goslings from McMurrays. I am SO excited. I have been trying to figure out the best feed available to me for them. I am thinking of Purina Flock Raiser Sunfresh Recipe.
http://www.tractorsupply.com/en/store/purinareg;-flock-raiserreg;-sunfreshreg;-recipe-crumble-50-lb

There is the link if anyone had an opinion. I am picking up a Niacin supplement for the ducklings today, is this appropriate for the goslings as well?

There will be ducks for company as well, but I decided on getting two goslings. I am hoping this will allow me to bond with them without them being too dependant on me. Any other reccomendations would be greatly appreciated! Thank you!
 
Congrats on your new babies and welcome to the forum! I use either purina unmedicated start n grow or mazuri starter for ducklings/goslings. I also use fresh dark greens (no spinach) and get them outside on grass as soon as possible, so grain is a supplement. If you feed grain as primary feed, it is important to cut protein down at 3 weeks to avoid potential angelwing problems.
 
Congrats on your new babies and welcome to the forum! I use either purina unmedicated start n grow or mazuri starter for ducklings/goslings. I also use fresh dark greens (no spinach) and get them outside on grass as soon as possible, so grain is a supplement. If you feed grain as primary feed, it is important to cut protein down at 3 weeks to avoid potential angelwing problems.
Thank you! I live in New England and the weather is very unpredictable so I will most likely have to cut the protein down at least in the beginning. Does this mean I need to switch feeds, or add oats or something similar?
 
Congrats on your new babies and welcome to the forum! I use either purina unmedicated start n grow or mazuri starter for ducklings/goslings. I also use fresh dark greens (no spinach) and get them outside on grass as soon as possible, so grain is a supplement. If you feed grain as primary feed, it is important to cut protein down at 3 weeks to avoid potential angelwing problems.

Maybe this is a silly question but why not spinach?
 
Not a silly question. Spinach contains an acid which interferes with calcium absorption.
 

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