A healthy chicken won't starve if offered palatable feed. You aren't wedded to any particular brand - I've fed Purina, Nutrena, a different Nutrena, Tucker Milling's 18% non-GMO, Harrel Milling's 16% Lay, 18%, and 24% Game Bird. My birds have never refused to eat.@SueT Thanks for posting this! I was literally just at the feed store looking at mill dates and prices, and was confused by Purina's date. A lot of old posts here at Backyard Chickens still discussed the single-digit year code they used to use, and those were all I found on my phone in the store. I ended up buying a different brand, just because they used a normal date scheme. But now that I know the Purina date code, I can keep them in mind for future purchases.
Somewhat related (but perhaps should be a new thread?), how often can you change brands of feed? Can you go with whatever is freshest / latest mill date at the feed store, as long as you gradually transition from one bag to the next? Or is it better to stay with a single brand, even if the food is older?
Also, how old is old? Is there a certain time span between mill date and finishing the bag that you should aim for?
Thanks!
Elizabeth
Most of us try and find bags which our birds will consume within three months of mill date - its a VERY arbitrary figure. Pellet lasts slightly longer (less surface area to mass, slows the effects of oxygen and moisture in spoiling the nutritional value of the feed), and whole grain lasts longer still (same reason plus the outer coating on most seeds/grains exists to protect against that) - but how much longer doesn't follow a hard/fast rule.
If your birds eat 50# a month, try not to buy feed more than two months old, and try to buy replacements near the end of the current bag. If your four birds take two months to finish the bag, you have a cost decision to make - is it worth it to buy smaller quantity, higher $/lb bags to ensure fresh feed, or does 4 or 5 month old feed work for you... Not a decision I can make for you _ ican't even offer an equation, because the speed of degradation isn't known, and there is no telling how old the contents were *before* the mill ground them into feed.