The Natural Chicken Keeping thread - OTs welcome!

howdy guys!

well i thought i would pas this along, nearly fell off my couch when i realized i have this wonderful stuff all over the back yard! this lady ive done some swapping with said she had some starts and bulbs, etc that she would swap for some eggs. so thought why not...so she says i have lamium, dug some up and sent it with a bunch of stuff. so i had no idea of what it was so i looked it up...holy cheese balls this stuff is awesome!

i have a cut in my armpit, must have strachted myself during the night. i've got my first-but not the last round of poison ivy this year. i get this stuff like mad, so mom looked at my skin said yep it a scratch and poison ivy. earlier my mom and i read about the lamium and after reading what i did thought why not try it. so i picked some, squished some of the leaves and stuck it in my pit. well the scratch is less irriatated, poison ivy has gone down, and i doesn't hurt anymore. so here is the article that i found. i am going to try all these suggestions and give it to my birds in their ff. i already give it to my rabbit, guinea pig-they love it!!!

hope you find it interesting!!

Dead-Nettle (lamium purpureum)


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Purple dead-nettle (lamium purpureum) is an extremely common lawn and roadside weed. It will carpet huge areas, and grow to be quite lush in fertile soil. It's a short-lived annual that will grow and flower even in the winter with mild temperatures. It's in the mint family, so it's a very mild mint - look closely at the stem and you can see it's square, or 4-sided, instead of round or cylindrical:

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Sometimes mint stems can be so hairy the best way to tell the stem is square is to feel it with your fingers. You'll feel the edges.

The entire plant is edible. The flavor is very mild, grassy - you can eat it stem and all, or pluck off the leafy tops. The leaves are covered in a dense hairy down - and this can take away some from the mild flavor. However you get used to it quickly.

Dead-nettle's reported to be highly nutritious, abundant in iron, vitamins, and fiber. The oil in the seeds is high in antioxidants. And the bruised leaves can be applied to external cuts and wounds to stop bleeding and aid in healing.

One great way to eat large quantities of this plant is to blend it into a smoothie. I'm a firm believer after many years of foraging that greens are the most important part of our diet. But instead of grazing and chewing all day (though chewing is important!), we can mimic an indigenous diet by blending up large amounts of greens and edible weeds into smoothies - the miracle tonic called the 'green smoothie'.

The dead-nettle is now in flower and my daughters and I go to gather a few cups of it for our smoothie:

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I use the entire above-ground portion of the plant, and collect it in one of our small muscadine baskets:

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When we were raw fooders camped in a small pine needle clearing in Apalachicola NF (northern Florida) - we spent a month working on crafts and primitive skills. Muscadine vines were everywhere (it's a tough southern grape). We made several baskets - they're incredibly durable:
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It's tough to gather a lot of the dead-nettle because of a very cold wind ripping by. Though it's almost March, it still feels like winter. On the walk back home, once I've gathered enough, we all chew and eat some of the dead-nettle. For me this is the best way to fully appreciate how nourishing this plant is - and it's a great exercise for your teeth and jaws.

I lay out my ingredients for the smoothie at home; the dead-nettle, a banana, a mango, and 2 cups of water:

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I put everything into a new Cuisinart blender I just picked up ($99 - but it puts out 600 watts, over 3/4 horsepower). Water first, then fruit, then greens:

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The finished product was rather watery and not too sweet and slightly gritty from imperfectly blended dead-nettle. So I peeled 6 baby bananas and threw them in. This did the trick. Sweet, rich, a smoothie-like consistency, and with all those weeds, unbelievably mineral-dense and nutritious.
Today is my first day of going back onto raw foods and being a 100% raw vegan again. I'm going to use an abundance of wild edible plants and green smoothies in my diet, and document the process here.
I want to feel again like I did several years ago - when the whole family was 100% raw, camping up on Black Balsam in western North Carolina, gathering huge amounts of wild blueberries, and blackberries, and cherries, and juneberries, and foraging on our hands and knees to collect trailside plantain for our salads. It's only a matter of discipline.
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Posted by

Rob at
6:23 PM
 
Guess what I just found out..

Our local co-op has organic feed!

Guess what else I just found out?

It's 38.50 a bag!
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How the heck am I supposed to do that?!

I'm thinking about doing a whole grain feed.

http://www.gardenbetty.com/2013/04/homemade-whole-grain-chicken-feed-updated-and-now-corn-free/
Can someone (LM) check this over. This seems very doable to me. The author has healthy chickens, but they don't have a large operation by any means. I want to make sure I am doing the best for my birds. I don't want to offer a diet of whole grains if it is going to make them nutritionally imbalanced.

I will be free ranging all year round, but we have 3-4 months of nothing but snow, so I will need a complete diet during those terrible months of nothing to forage.

I don't want to grind the feed.

Do they need added salt if they are free ranged?! This question is for Delisha

What would they pick up while foraging that would supplement that need?

Lots and LOTS of questions. Please help me figure this out!
From the info I could find on these ingredients it is somewhere between 14 and 16 percent protein.
$38.50 a bag I don't know what to say other than glad it is not a requirement to feed organic GMO free feed to be here because I would be gone.
But then what do I know I feed 33 and 1/3 percent oats to my chickens every since they came off of starter feed and do not have runny poops.
 
EMERGENCY!

Ok, here's the scoop - got some saddles for my girls because I'm still waiting for my new pullets to get big enough as I already know I have too many roos to my hens. All my other girls are just a little feather bare on their backs and a small bare spot on their heads - no wounds, no completely bare backs, yet - which is why I got the saddles. I have one big EE roo and two other little silkie roos.

Anyway, I noticed something when I was putting on her saddle and then when I pulled some feathers away and her wing, this is what I found. I feel terrible! I haven't done a full examination on them for a while and I wish I would have caught this before.

I just need help to know what to do - I am guessing she got tore open from the roos as there is nothing else that could have caused this that I can think of. Also, the rooster does not have his spurs yet.

I have her in the house right now - soaking her in warm water to loosen up the junk that's dried all over it. It's a bunch of dirt and stuff. When I try to pull some, her skin is pretty raw underneath, but I know I've got to get it all - it's like she's skinned alive right there.

I have neosporin, bluekote - maybe other things that you would suggest. What is the best way to deal with this? I don't see any big signs of infection yet.




Do you have any nu-stock. If not neosporin with blue coat sprayed over top.
 
Do you have any nu-stock. If not neosporin with blue coat sprayed over top.

Still waiting for nu-stock to come in. I have neosporin and blukote. Should I put her new saddle on and let her back into the coop? Or is that a bad idea because the rooster can continue to hurt her? Also, I can slide a q-tip all around the wound under the skin - it's like skinning a chicken alive.
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I did get some dirt out though.
 
Wow..I don't think I'd want him to have access to her until she can heal. Is that possible?

Yes, I think I can separate her although I'm not sure she will be too happy about it since she won't be able to get into the coop to lay. I lock my roos up at night in a cock box, so she could still sleep with the girls at night for warmth - she would just be in an isolation cage within the coop during the day. I think I will do that for a bit because I'm afraid even with the saddle, he might tear her wound open again.
 

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