Where does wheat grow in the States? My child-like mental image of the great plains is endless wheat fields and grain silos.
Canadian wheat is a thing here, attracting premium prices for bread-making for example. Has it got too hot on the US side of the border for wheat?
rural mouse kinda hit on it, we do corn and soybeans mostly -- those beautiful visions you have... don't exist much anymore D:
@BDutch it was just regular chickens in a run like most people keep chickens -- it was not meat birds, just regular ol' hens who were 3-4 years old and had kinda slowed down laying and they killed them to eat.
They noticed that being on the 'scratch grains' (their neighbor's birds) (which is what we call it here in the US is about 8-10% protein and looks, to our eye, fantastic, because it's seeds and pieces of corn, etc) they were gross. Fat. They showed pics of the processed bird with all the fat all over the carcass. It was disgusting lol
Then, they showed pics of a bird who eats the better food (it was their own birds) (like Purina Layer Feed or Kalmbach Layer Feed, etc) which is twice the price.
Same kind of birds, just backyard birds kept in a coop/run environment -- again, like MOST people keep chickens.
And they had a normal amount of fat deposits on them and the processed chicken carcass looked healthy and normal.
The way I look at it is, feathers cost a lot of energy to make -- egg making costs a lot of energy to make -- running around 6 acres costs a lot of energy. The 20% protein food I offer (which seems to be something my adults eat in the mornings before I open the doors and in the evenings before bed only (and not everyone! some barely eat the food at all)) is better for their needs for my extremely active flock.
If I didn't have babies or roosters I'd still feed them the all-flock 20%
Btw
@Perris I have found a local wheat supplier but I just haven't made the decision to ferment yet -- I am still considering it!