MrsNorthie
Free Ranging
- May 3, 2023
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This is great news! Do you use fresh turmeric or dried/ground? I think we can grow it here, year round, as long as we keep it in greenhouse conditions.Taxes and update on homemade feed transition. It's been exactly two months since I switched the chickens here to a totally non-commercial feeding routine. Their diet now consists of one meal of fermented grain and flax seed mix in the morning and one meal of a cooked rice, barley, peas, and vegetable mix in the afternoon. I add sunflower oil, turmeric, black pepper, and a small pinch of salt to the afternoon meal. Plus all they can forage free ranging all day. At least once but mostly twice per week, they get some sardines or beef with grains soaked in bone broth. Lime chips and crushed eggshells are available for the hens. Also, anytime I'm around when one of the hens lays, I give her a "calcium treat" when she comes off the nest -- a piece of cheese rolled in a crushed calcium tablet.
No other vitamins or supplements have been given.
So far, so good. No illness, lameness, or lethargy. The 13 week old chicks are growing and putting on weight. All combs and wattles are healthy red. Eyes look clear and bright. All are active, foraging, digging, dust bathing, and ranging quite a bit farther out now that the tribes are separating.
In July, I recorded 74 eggs laid by my four laying hens.
Rusty: 20
Tina: 19
Patucha: 18
Dusty: 17
All eggs were well-formed with good hard shells, dark yellow to orange yolks, no runny albumens. No change in hardness or shape from when they ate layer feed, and I think the yolks are actually richer.