Quote:
I have some 4" pvc pipe, cut into 18" sections and then cut in half and hang on the wire of the pens with zip ties for my feeders. the birds clean them out, I don't... then again i'm currently feeding 6 pens plus the free rangers plus the chicks. for 13 birds in a single pen, I would probably use 3-4 sections of the pipe feeders spread out. some people use the plastic gutters.
i have 3 plastic 5 gallon buckets that i rotate. that way the grain has 2 days to ferment before feeding. it's pretty simple, not time consuming at all.
2 buckets have feed in them at all times, the 3rd bucket is used to start a new batch each day. the mash settles out on the bottom, so each morning i pour any excess liquid off the top of that day's bucket (some mash goes with it - a strainer is used to catch any solids or floating grains/seeds like boss, which is dumped back into the feed mix) and then feed what's left using a large strainer scoop for each feeder/pen. any feed/liquid left gets dumped into the extra bucket with the rest that was poured over earlier. then i add enough feed/grains/etc for one day's worth of feeding, adding water to the bucket i fed from (to rinse it) and add that rinse water to the new batch, filling the new bucket within 2" of the top. stir it up and put the lid on. then i stir both buckets (the new one and the one that was mixed the day before) at lunch time and before bed. the next day, i use the second batch that was mixed 2 days before following the same routine. that gives 2 good days of fermentation to break down the grains, making them more digestible.
for 60-70 birds i use 4-5 scoops of pellets, 1 scoop of scratch grains (cracked corn, oats, wheat & boss) each scoop being a 4 cup measuring cup... stirring at least once the first day is important as the fermentation produces a lot of gas at first and will shove all the solids to the top, in contact with the air. FF needs to have water covering it, since LABs are anaerobic.
the actual mixing, feeding and stirring takes me probably half hour a day, but the majority of that is actually feeding the multiple pens and turning the free rangers loose, checking waters, & looking the birds over to make sure they're all healthy.