Cynthia12 I am so sorry about your loss there that can be so tough
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Ouch.... We have never bought or sold a square for more than $2...
The guineas are at the post office!
Oh mann... How about giving Alfalfa pellets a go... Beat pellets as well are a good buffer feed though I feed them as a wet mush.... because they expand but ruminants can handle that better than horses.
deb
I regularly pay seventeen dollars a bale in summer and up to nineteen dollars a bale in winter....
Its all trucked in... either from the Imperial valley or from as far as Oregon. OUr bales are three strand and run about 120 to 135 pounds a bale.
Silly some say, but I think there are a few here that can relate to the sadness of losing a chicken.![]()


Way back when my Grandpa had horses, which was quite some time ago since he died in 1995....He took a truck load of alfalfa hay to a mill and they turned it into alfalfa pellets. He had them use molasses not beat juice though.Where do you live??? Just wowsers!
I also enjoyed your hay post...good info
Little keets, very exciting. Also, most excellent that there were no losses...was a short trip for them?
Alfalfa pellets are a processed product (as is beet pulp). That means lots of truck time before it get anywhere close to my town... also, maybe they are in stock, and maybe not.
I do feed some alfalfa pellets to my milking goats..higher protein..but they are over $20 for a 50 pound bag.
Stuff up here. ...all super spendy.
Those are big...so even with trucking your prices aren't that bad. I was talking little squares, 50 to 90 pounds, usually 60 to 70.
That is a hard part of owning chickens... most people don't understand the bond.
We totally understand. I am still sad about a chicken I lost maybe 7 years back now. "Mama chicken" was wonderful.
Good price for Barley!Alaska has very little in the way of manufacturing. It is interesting, but in regards to that kind of infastructure we are bottom of the barrel.
We even ship out our crude, get it processed "outside", and then the gas has to be shipped all the way back.
We do have one feed mill in the entire state (only manufactured brand that ships to my town) and they have to input from out of state many of their ingredients.
Last year someone from the center of the state set something up where he bags and sells the local oats and barley. Fantastic since the prices are good. $12 for 50 pounds of barley.
Where do you live??? Just wowsers!
I also enjoyed your hay post...good info
Little keets, very exciting. Also, most excellent that there were no losses...was a short trip for them?
Alfalfa pellets are a processed product (as is beet pulp). That means lots of truck time before it get anywhere close to my town... also, maybe they are in stock, and maybe not.
I do feed some alfalfa pellets to my milking goats..higher protein..but they are over $20 for a 50 pound bag.
Stuff up here. ...all super spendy.
Those are big...so even with trucking your prices aren't that bad. I was talking little squares, 50 to 90 pounds, usually 60 to 70.
That is a hard part of owning chickens... most people don't understand the bond.
We totally understand. I am still sad about a chicken I lost maybe 7 years back now. "Mama chicken" was wonderful.

My turkey poults were like that...we had to go in every hour and peck at their feed so they would eat! Sooooooo stupid. It took them a week to learn to do it on their own.My guinea keets came from IA, Meyers hatchery to Virginia. They all arrived alive. They are so dumb that the only one that has figured out how to get feed got stuck in there! But they are cute! I got them to eat ticks, and now there are not so many of them around
I'm so sad! I haven't been this sad over losing a chicken for a long time, because I haven't lost a chicken for a long time. My little Uggums is gone.She just never came out of that last broody very well. She got real thin while sitting, even though I took her off the nest every now and again to eat and drink, which she did, but not much. It was so hot..and still is. She was skin and bones today.
Man, I'm going to miss that little cute thing come running every morning when I go out. Silly some say, but I think there are a few here that can relate to the sadness of losing a chicken.
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