MrsNorthie
Free Ranging
- May 3, 2023
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I think for most of us, we just want happy healthy chickens with the maximum life expectancy.The industry wants fast growth, but fast growth may not be optimal for the chicken.

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I think for most of us, we just want happy healthy chickens with the maximum life expectancy.The industry wants fast growth, but fast growth may not be optimal for the chicken.
Most pollutions solves in time but not all. Adding poisons all the time from agriculture, oil products, industry and medicines make it worse every decade. More mouths also means we need other ways to produce food and other eating habits. Less meat, more split peas, beansThe Earth can deal with most poisons given some time. The problems you metion are still a stocking density problem apart from perhaps gmo but the reason we have invested in gmo products is a stocking density problem because there are more mouths to feed than none intensive production methods can manage and make a profit.
I believe chickens, pigs , humans and many more herbivores do well enough with an unbalanced food regime. As long as there is a fair amount of the needed ingredients in it. Including minerals and vitamins. Maybe more important is that it shouldn’t have too much sugar, fat and salt in it on a regular basis. Im not talking about optimising for commerce.It rather depends on which profile one aims for, there are lots to choose from. Like it or not, what little we know about nutrition in general has been researched by large commercial enterprises.
If natural is important you can add cooked feed to the list ‘ no feed for chickens’. And I don’t think chickens often come across meat like pork and beef, in the wild, and fish is a really rare catch for chickens imho. You can add feed like rice (original habitat), grass seeds, fruits, insects and frogs to the list ‘ natural yummie feed for chickens’Dairy produce is a definite no. There is no way a chicken would encounter it in natural keeping conditions.
Soy comes from China.A lot longer than either corn or soy (at least for those parts of the world).
BeautifulHere are a few pics from a not as chilly day.
Fluffy Butts-on-the water.
Or anywhere with a stream that the birds can use for drinking: there may be any number of aquatic species that could be ingested.
The root of so many of the problems humans cause. There should be moderation in all things, yet we're compelled to find ways to maximize our own stocking density. Like automating production of needs like food so we can spend more time sitting around feeling restless and confused about our purpose. Humans are a muddle.it's a stocking density problem
The whole feed business, commercial and home grown is a bit of a nightmare to make sense of. No doubt there is much that could be improved in commercial feed, particularly the feeds that get sold to backyard keepers. The feed the large progressive commercial concerns use is not the same from what I've read and been told.The root of so many of the problems humans cause. There should be moderation in all things, yet we're compelled to find ways to maximize our own stocking density. Like automating production of needs like food so we can spend more time sitting around feeling restless and confused about our purpose. Humans are a muddle.
When the commercial-feed conversation started on this thread, I remember feeling like a black sheep since our chickens love commercial feed, and I'm grateful for the option. I'm not sure I have the experience needed to catch symptoms of malnutrition early enough. Also, despite the number of farms around us, sourcing grains is difficult and expensive. Farms are either tiny & craft or corporate & inaccessible.
That said, I've fermented feed in the past and will likely do so again soon, and this thread has greatly expanded our chickens' palates. It's been timely because our Ashley has been going through something weird, slightly reminiscent of issues experienced by Carbon, maybe a little bit of Fret (specifically her reduced feed intake), and @TropicalChickies' Butchie. She fasts for 2 weeks every 3 months.
It started with laying problems before molt last fall. A few softshell eggs plus a slow crop for a couple weeks. She bounced back, molted, and laid beautiful blue eggs all spring, but in late May, she stopped laying again and went off commercial feed.
Her poops became thin, green strands, urates still white. Hard crop the first few nights, then empty for days. Clean butt, good balance, and she stayed sociable and active. Very active, in fact, because while others napped or dustbathed, Ashley foraged. She was always foraging.
Upon close inspection, I saw she was eating a lot of grit and those tiny things in the dirt the human eye doesn't see. I started putting chick grit out for her, and she ate a ton of it.
If a cricket crossed her path, she'd grab that, too, but in the first days of the fast, she wouldn't take so much as a mealworm from me. My first interventions for her had been medication hidden in treats, so maybe she thought my offerings were too "mediciney."
Around this time, @Perris published the feed article, and I remember thinking, oh no, if Ashley doesn't want a mealworm, her "prospects for recovery are poor" (per the section about feed for invalids). But she'd eat a mealworm if found under a rock, so I did the only sane thing, obviously, and postponed all non-essential work and social commitments to spend hours turning over rocks and logs for Ashley.
The side benefit was that if she didn't survive her fast, she'd at least spend her last days living a good life, and I'd have had the quality time with her.
She did start moving a little more slowly, but still good balance, bright-eyed, and bushy tailed. She got by on the termites we found together and typically one item per day of whatever partially @Perris-inspired smorgasbrød I'd offer: she might scarf down oats one day but ignore the mealworms. The next, she'd ignore the oats and eat only the greek yogurt. The next: only blueberries.
The others greatly enjoyed her daily leftovers, and suddenly their diets were much more diverse, but they still liked to fill their crops full of commercial feed for the night. Ashley did, too, after 2 weeks of incredibly reduced intake.
It happened again in August (and sent her into an early but not hard molt) and just recently, in November. She went back to commercial feed a week ago, to my delight, since termites and crickets have disappeared for winter, so I'd been overtime to find her food this time. Cucumber ended up being the gateway back to eating a normal amount again.
In knew she was about to start eating commercial feed when she ate 3 of these grapes and half the cucumber, along with every last mealworm, awaiting their fate here in a bed of flax and chia seeds.
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Here she is back at the feeder for breakfast, not looking or feeling overly skinny after 2 weeks of eating nearly nothing. It's as though her metabolism shuts down, and she maintains.
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Lastly, since those of you with the BYC calendar are surely missing his face after turning to December, here's a poultry paparazzi photo of Mr. November relaxing in the dustbath with his squad. That's Miss Eula (2x Miss February) to the right.
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So far, the Buffs seem to love 30-70 F (1-21 C) They are ok 20-25 degrees warmer as long as they have shade, a fan and plenty of water. I have the brooder heater mounted on the wall behind the roost, in the coop because we did have a couple of nights where we dipped into the mid to upper 20's (-3 to -1 C) and I wanted the warmth available. (but they did not seem to really take advantage of this.) It is high enough to not come in any contact with any bedding, and we covered the windows with plastic sheeting but even with that, the coop is not air tight so they get plenty of circulation. They seem to be comfortable and taking advantage of body heat, all lined up on either side of Blue.Some cope with it better than others but the opinion that chickens don't feel the cold because they've got feathers isn't born out from what I've seen.