Nestle had absolutely nothing to do with Purina Poultry feeds, nothing.Interesting to know.
I'm feeding my ducklings Dumor duckling starter and they seem to be doing well. Nestle owns Purina, and I don't trust Nestle!
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Nestle had absolutely nothing to do with Purina Poultry feeds, nothing.Interesting to know.
I'm feeding my ducklings Dumor duckling starter and they seem to be doing well. Nestle owns Purina, and I don't trust Nestle!
What is 'corn distillers grains with solubles'?Nestle had absolutely nothing to do with Purina Poultry feeds, nothing.
What is 'corn distillers grains with solubles'?
Seems Nestle/Purina is the only company using it.I believe that's spent grain from brewing, solubles is soluble fiber. It's not a bad ingredient, it's in a lot of animal feed.
Lazy can correct me if I'm wrong.
Just leftover grain from brewing companies.What is 'corn distillers grains with solubles'?
yes. The issue with the Purina name is a complicated one.Well, the bags of feed say Purina on them, so I am assuming that they are Purina.
Most Nestle stuff says Nestle on it, so I don't buy it. They took over San Pelagrino some time back.
My birds loved it for the most part when I had access to fresh stuff. A couple wouldn't eat it, but far more obsessed over itJust leftover grain from brewing companies.
it was quite a normal procedure, and still is to feed live stock spent grains, lefrover mash of beets and sugar cane from the sugar industry, dried potato bits etc. It's very economical and still contains nutrients.