Successful 100% forage diet experiment (long post)

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Every so often someone posts a question asking if chickens can survive solely on free-range/forage. The overwhelming response is generally a resounding "no", followed by a laundry list of reasons why it shouldn't be attempted (from not enough forage to increased exposure to predation, etc), which is probably true in most situations.

I am always interested in the threads talking about this because it just seems to me that 100% free-ranging is a species-appropriate life for a chicken, and in my mind, is the gold standard that I should strive for. Adding to that, I geek out on nutrition topics (humans AND animals), so the idea of truly unadulterated meat and eggs makes me swoon.

I just can't believe that this practice is nothing more than a relic of days gone by, only existing in stories of how our grandparents did it. I've been toying with the idea of trying it out for years. I don't feed my goats or my steer, so...why am I feeding the chickens?

I decided to go for it.

So, back somewhere around May I gathered up 48 eggs from my flock and dusted off the Janoel. I had never attempted a dry hatch/incubation, so I decided to try it out. 38 of the 48 hatched right on time with a 3 day spread from first pip to last out of the shell.

I fed the chicks fermented organic, soy-free, non-gmo layer mash direct from the mill while they were in the brooder phase. (Yes, layer mash. 17% to be exact.) I did not vaccinate them, add anything to the water, or supplement with 'treats'). Not a single chick had pasty butt, by the way. (That's because of the fermented feed).

I moved the chicks to an outdoor, open-air brooder when the first adult feathers started showing up. Yes, this is earlier than 'general wisdom' says to do so. I kept them on the fermented feed and started pulling up large clumps of grass and weeds and random vegetation from the creek bank, (roots and dirt and rocks included) to put inside the brooder every day. Once over the initial fear of the new 'thing' in the brooder, the chicks would attack the clumps of vegetation with gusto. I also did not clean out the outdoor brooder. I left all the grass and dirt refuse in it.

The brooder is a two-story prefab coop marketed for 4-6 adult birds, (but isn't big enough for one bird to live it's life in if you ask me). I built a hardware cloth floor for the brooder and put it on wagon tires. It sits outside in the grass and is surrounded by electric poultry netting. My intent was to move the brooder and fence every week or so and keep the youngsters confined within the electric poultry netting.

I started letting the chicks out of the brooder house when they were about 1/2 fuzz and 1/2 feathers. They would stay out all day and return to the coop for the night. What I didn't realize at first is that some were going right through the poultry netting and out into the wild unknown all day long. When I figured this out, all bets were off and I just started opening the gate in the mornings and closing it at night. The experiment was officially beginning whether I liked it or not.

I put some fermented feed in the brooder each evening for about a week, mostly for my own peace of mind that it would get the birds to return home.
It did.
However, the birds all had full crops upon returning to the brooder each evening, so I decided it was time to stop offering food completely.

And that is how it has remained to this day. I never moved the brooder from it's original location and I don't even close it. I do close the electric fence. Gotta say that I'm happy to NOT have to pull up and reset a ridiculous amount of electric poultry fencing every week...

Have there been losses? Yes. I lost 3 birds to sour crop early on, which I believe was due to eating overly fibrous grasses.
Do they still return to the brooder? Most do, others just return to the general area. They don't all choose to roost inside the brooder house. Some roost on top of it. Others roost high up in nearby Oak trees. Two hens and a roo seem to prefer roosting on my lawnmower.

All but one hen and 4 roosters have figured out that flying over the fence every morning is preferable to waiting on me to go open the gate for them. Half the flock hauls butt into the forest and the other half head off to the creek first thing every day, even before daylight (I only know this because I can hear the roosters). I rarely see them at all until dusk rolls around and they start heading back to the brooder house.

An armadillo and a possum have decided to make homes inside the poultry fencing. The possum routinely steals the nest box bedding, which is fine because the hens won't use the nest boxes. A few will lay eggs inside the brooder house. Two lay eggs on my front deck. One lays an egg in the doghouse that my elderly cat stays in during the winter. The rest of them lay eggs in the woods. None of the birds seem to mind the armadillo and possum hanging around.

Are the birds skinny? Malnourished? Bony? No, No, and No. They are all of comparable size to my other flock that free ranges during the day and is given 16% layer pellets every evening after returning to the barn.

Do I give them any food at all? Sure. I throw their eggshells outside after breakfast. If any birds are still around the house they will immediately come and eat them. I also throw out the meat and bones leftover from making chicken bone broth. They eat every scrap of it. I occasionally throw out wilty fruit/vegetables or stale bread ends (homemade). I do this mostly because I'm lazy and it's easier to throw this stuff off the back deck than it is to have it stinking up the kitchen trash can. If the chickens don't eat it, possums and raccoons will. Either is fine with me. Point being that I throw stuff to them on occasion, but in insignificant amounts.

The eggs are smaller than those from my older barn flock, but they are the same in regards to having thick shells and membranes. Unless you hit a rock, the eggs bounce when you throw them on the ground! The yolks are the darkest orange-red I've ever seen. I honestly thought something was very wrong when I saw the first one. The older barn birds eggs also have nice orange yolks, but not anywhere near as dark the others. I don't know why there is a color difference between the flocks.

As for predation, I haven't lost any birds from this flock to predators. I do lose birds from the barn flock to predators on a regular basis...about one a month. I see hawks overhead every day and I often see a fox slinking around near the barn. Raccoons are plentiful. I don't know why this flock has managed to survive predation so far. Is it because they've lived 'wild' basically their whole lives and are more world-wise and able to avoid predators? I truly don't know.

They have a decent amount of forest to roam...land that has never been developed or used for anything. It has decades upon decades of forest floor leaf litter, decaying branches, mosses, mushrooms, and who-knows-what-all out there. I'm certain it's a bug smorgasbord. I no longer fill up waterers either. I stopped that awhile back, too. There's a mile of creek here, so I figure they're good with that.

So, there you go. Chickens can not only survive, they can thrive, on a 100% free-range/forage diet.

I know that not everyone lives in a similar type of place and I wouldn't think of trying this in a suburban yard situation, or even a semi-suburban with a couple of acres situation. I'm not advocating for everyone to stop feeding their chickens. Some of you out there may have the right kind of place for this and a mind to try it, and I'm just here saying it can be done. And at the risk of patting myself on the back too hard...I feel like I may have raised a better/hardier/smarter flock of birds than any of the others I've had before.

Or maybe they've just been lucky. :confused:


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I only give mine a little feed when they come in at dark just to lock them in for the night from predators. Has worked perfectly for me for many years
 
I'm fascinated with this post, I would like to see if it would be possible to scale it down to a smaller homestead. We have 1 rooster and 21 hens and they live on about a 1/4 acre section of our backyard in Florida.

My idea is to grow as much forage as possible for them in this small area.

So far, I have a lot of:

1. Mexican Sunflower which self propagates when the branches touch the ground (it is a perennial that is high in protein), our chickens love it Chickens eating Mexican sunflower leaves

2. Bananas which multiply in clumps without my effort (chickens eat the leaves and the fruit)
Here is one of our hens eating banana leaves

3. Moringa trees which are highly nutritious and grow abundantly

4. Cranberry hibiscus which is another perennial and has highly nutritious leaves

5. Arugula which self seeds easily

6. Tons of woodchips which the chickens scratch through to get bugs and worms

Any other suggestions of perennials I could grow for the chickens?
 
Fascinating concept. I see no reason why this would not work; after all, they are birds and thousands of species of wild birds thrive with no intervention from humans all around the world. OTOH, how practical is it from an animal husbandry standpoint? By keeping my birds confined I know where to find both the birds when I want to harvest them for meat, and the eggs when I want breakfast - and I know those eggs are fresh because i harvest them daily. But by confining them, I restrict their foraging ability, which means I have to provide food for them. I have created an unnatural symbiotic relationship with them.

So, sure, they can survive in the wild in many places. Go to Hawaii and other tropical climes and watch it succeed. But is it practical? Not for the average backyard chicken tender.
 
I'm fascinated with this post, I would like to see if it would be possible to scale it down to a smaller homestead. We have 1 rooster and 21 hens and they live on about a 1/4 acre section of our backyard in Florida.

My idea is to grow as much forage as possible for them in this small area.

So far, I have a lot of:

1. Mexican Sunflower which self propagates when the branches touch the ground (it is a perennial that is high in protein), our chickens love it Chickens eating Mexican sunflower leaves

2. Bananas which multiply in clumps without my effort (chickens eat the leaves and the fruit)
Here is one of our hens eating banana leaves

3. Moringa trees which are highly nutritious and grow abundantly

4. Cranberry hibiscus which is another perennial and has highly nutritious leaves

5. Arugula which self seeds easily

6. Tons of woodchips which the chickens scratch through to get bugs and worms

Any other suggestions of perennials I could grow for the chickens?
You've got a great variety of forage. Moringa especially catches my eye. It's an amazing forage/fodder. I've started some trees in the greenhouse to transplant out along the creek this year.
If you try it out with birds that are used to getting feed every day, just cut back a little on the feed gradually and watch how they do. Watch how they behave, how active they are, and look at the size of their crops at the end of the day before you start reducing feed so that you'll know if they are finding enough forage to make up the difference. I don't know if you feed their eggshells back to them, but it can't hurt. I do even though calcium is abundant where I am.
If for some reason it doesn't work out completely, it sounds like you've got enough variety there to be able to at least reduce their dependence on feed by quite a lot.

I'd really love to hear how it works out for you. Please come back with updates!
 
Here's an interesting article about feeding comfrey to chickens feeding comfrey to chickens
I've tried to grow comfrey in the past specifically for my chickens but I haven't been very successful with it. I've read quite a lot about it and it's useful in so many ways. Pigeon Pea is another plant that is said to be a great fodder for chickens and i think ruminants, too.
 
I've read a lot that comfrey grows really quickly and is fairly nutrient dense. It's one to consider. I may plant some myself next spring.
Which are you referring to? True Comfrey or the Russian varieties? I've read a ton about the russian varieties (Bocking 4, Bocking 14, etc), but not a lot about true comfrey. As I understand it, true comfrey spreads rapidly and can take over an area quickly. The russian varieties spread too, i think, but slow enough to keep them where you want them. I've only ever tried to grow Bocking 14, but winter temps kill it every time. But then, if growing it for forage, then maybe true comfrey would be a better choice?? Hmmm. Seems like I've got some research to do...
 
I mean, sure that's good. But that's not most peoples birds. Not everyone wants game chickens and that's not the majority of chickens people own. That's like saying "Can wild chickens survive in the wild????" Yes. Duh. But the vast majority of people have domestic food-production style chickens and ask if they can just free range 24/7 like grandpa did and still expect eggs or good health or avoid mass predator losses and the answer is usually no. If you have ideal birds for wild living in a situation with tons of space and a good climate of course they're mostly gonna make it. But you're also giving up production.
I find it really interesting the difference in my birds (I have a lot of different breeds) even though they all came from hatchery stock.

My Leghorn I think could easily survive off free range as when I let them out she’s very industrious and always scratching away. She finds tons of food for herself including stuff that the other birds miss and doesn’t eat that much feed. My EEs are also pretty good foragers.

Meanwhile some of the birds like the SS, Delaware, Orps, Australorp, etc. not only eat a ton but will literally eat food from the feeder before coming out even with the door wide open! Or they make us dig holes for them. 😂🤦‍♀️

Now, once they’re out or if we’re not out there, they’re pretty good foragers and find a lot of stuff but they’re definitely a lot lazier 😂 I need about 20 million more Leghorns to turn loose 😂🤣
 

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