Well, if you're a hungry pheasant, especially if you are a hungry pheasant who has never studied nutrition and does not have the advantage of knowing what happens to tens of thousands of other hungry pheasants when fed this diet or that diet, I am sure that (raw) gleanings from a soybean field are pretty nifty
That does not make them the best idea to intentionally feed to your chickens, especially in any significant quantity.
Pretty much all beans have the trypsin inhibitor in different amounts; soybeans have more of it than most other beans. Cook 'em first.
Have fun,
Pat
That does not make them the best idea to intentionally feed to your chickens, especially in any significant quantity.
Pretty much all beans have the trypsin inhibitor in different amounts; soybeans have more of it than most other beans. Cook 'em first.
Have fun,
Pat