new research debunks trad views on nutrition

I was brainstorming with a friend the other day about alternative feeds that I could source locally and free. I collect a lot of pecans and feed them to the flock. He said what about acorns? There are unlimited amounts of them here in the fall I could collect. I haven't tried to feed them yet. I know wood ducks, squirrel, deer and hogs love them.
 
Well, I’m still learning. To be honest I’ve been too lazy to work on providing all the food for the chicks.
I would like to grow some of the staple crops like corn.
I would like to set up a black soldier fly bin.
I would like a bigger space so the chickens could have more fresh grazing.

I was brainstorming with a friend the other day about alternative feeds that I could source locally and free. I collect a lot of pecans and feed them to the flock. He said what about acorns? There are unlimited amounts of them here in the fall I could collect. I haven't tried to feed them yet. I know wood ducks, squirrel, deer and hogs love them.
My chickens and turkeys like acorns and walnuts mowed up so they can get into the meat.
 
He said what about acorns? There are unlimited amounts of them here in the fall I could collect. I haven't tried to feed them yet. I know wood ducks, squirrel, deer and hogs love them.
They are a historic famine food (people make them into bread when regular cereals fail), but there are 00s of types of oak and acorn, and some may suit this purpose better than others; the ones left behind by the ducks, squirrels, deer and hogs are left for a reason. Often it's because something tiny has eaten the contents already.
 

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