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- #11
I hear what your saying, but my pullets and my 9 week chicks would not touch grit, have not ever touched it so I added grit to the food ( put a cup on a lid from bucket ) and they did take what they wanted of the grit, . my pullets are so weird, I purchased them at 12 weeks and they completely empty a dish of food onto the ground and never eat from the dish, what a mess even refusing to eat from the hanging feeder. and they never go near the grit dish, like its poison. so when I put the real food out I worried they would get imapacted so thats why I added the grit,.they took what they wanted and left some grit on the lid. then I added a lot of the scratch and peck to the feeder that was hung and they ate from it !! Im so glad, no more waste. they liked the food so much they were willing to eat with the feeder hanging which was never the case before, not even the chicks will eat from a hanging feeder, tonight they did for the first time. they were so skiddish, it was funny watching them and running around like " take the dish down so I can eat mama" !! my other hens ate it like mad also, at the feeder non stop. Im glad they took to this, now I can say my eggs are organic to LOL what goes in is organic, so what comes out must be to right? LOLThat's great! Glad they like it. Mine seemed to as well, but they are eating way more of the other feed now that we switched. Too funny, the differences in flocks. If I were you though, I wouldn't add grit to the food, I'd offer free choice in another container; they are smart and know how much they need, but if you put it in their food they have no choice but to eat it even if their bodies don't need as much as you give (even if it's very little, if that makes sense). The walls of my run are 1/2" hardware cloth so I just put grit in a bird feeder that hangs nicely on the side of the hdwr cloth and they love it. If it's two sided, you can also put oyster shell in one side and grit in the other when they're laying. HTH!