rockethoe
Songster
- Sep 9, 2023
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other: I also free feed seaweed meal for trace elements and add sodium bicarb at 1% of their feed. and move them onto fresh forage daily.
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So how many eggs do you typically get a day with this regimen? What does the sodium bicarb do for them?other: I also free feed seaweed meal for trace elements and add sodium bicarb at 1% of their feed. and move them onto fresh forage daily.
we are not yet reaching the genetic potential of our hens. lay rate is 78%. potential is 90%. the main reason for this is we do not use formulated feed, so we are working on formulating our own mix. every week we get a little better.So how many eggs do you typically get a day with this regimen? What does the sodium bicarb do for them?
The only research paper I could find said it could potentially increase egg laying during high heat stress. Other than that, not much.So how many eggs do you typically get a day with this regimen? What does the sodium bicarb do for them?
there were multiple studies in the 60's. The frank and Berger one, to which I assume you're referring, was a study of birds that were subject to minor heat/carbon dioxide stress. The rest were in normal circumstances.The only research paper I could find said it could potentially increase egg laying during high heat stress. Other than that, not much.
Maybe we're reading different, but looking at the links you provided I see:The ones I read show mixed results and not significant improvements in laying.
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00071669208417527
https://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/docum...&doi=6f0ba7345af35997f612894a3ac94c5ed60113d9
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0032579119405907
Agree, its just not a significant difference. Which I understand could make a difference for keeping battery hens and the bottom line. For people with a few hens in the backyard the risks outweigh the rewards and they wouldn't see a difference in egg production or health and could have negative effects if fed incorrectly.Maybe we're reading different, but looking at the links you provided I see:
for sure someone with 6 hens in the garden isn't going to notice 6 - 9% increase, but even if you have 100 hens (we're scaling to reach 300) its enough of a difference to make it worthwhileAgree, its just not a significant difference. Which I understand could make a difference for keeping battery hens and the bottom line. For people with a few hens in the backyard the risks outweigh the rewards and they wouldn't see a difference in egg production or health and could have negative effects if fed incorrectly.