Farmgirl283420
Rounding up cockerels
- Feb 21, 2023
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My Daffy would eat lettuce but now that she passed I don’t think the others do.
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Yes. Cx here are similar. When I started the project, there were a lot of things I didn't know that I didn't know.very interesting @U_Stormcrow . I imagine the cross in the Cornish x can make quite a difference. The Cornish now usually used here commercially are harvested at 4 to 6 weeks (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broiler ) and it is hard to find information on never mind photos of the breeder stock. My understanding is they are very closely guarded strains.
Try toasting the bread, mine love it so much more.
I'm not realy talking about food as much as general health and illness.I think it would depend on what information you are trying to find.
If you want to know what foods will kill a chicken, and what foods will cause major harm to a chicken, and what foods appear safe for a chicken, I think the broiler studies should be just fine. They will be much more useful than studies about what foods are safe for cows or pigs or dogs or mice or even people. That seems like the point that would matter for this thread.
If you want the "best" chicken feed for a flock, then broiler studies will still be more useful than cattle or pig studies, but will give one specific kind of "best" feed (fast growth, while avoiding health problems bad enough to matter by butchering day, all as cheaply as possible.) The actual "best" food for a flock of backyard pet hens may be much more expensive, not cause such fast growth, and avoid more health problems for a much longer time, but will not be found in broiler studies.
I have small bantams. Dutch look a likes but too heavy for show quality.Personally I would love to have a breed that layer 150 eggs a year for 5+ years. Then the occasional egg after that while retiring in dignity teaching the new generation all the tricks.
I'm curious about your scale in this picture.
The scale broke. Quickly. But it would give volumes of milk and water based on weight.I'm curious about your scale in this picture.
Weight Milk Water
What are those designations for?
Interesting, though I wouldn't have a use for it.But it would give volumes of milk and water based on weight.
The scientific name of a chicken is Gallus gallus domesticus, while the scientific name of red junglefowl-their wild ancestors-is Gallus gallus. So you said two different species there.
Older definitions are not always correct definitions. If you followed what you said, then you would be saying that a chicken and a peafowl are the same thing just because they can create offspring?To some of us old farts who follow older definitions, if they can reproduce and create fertile offspring they are the same species.![]()
What? What are laughing emojis supposed to tell me?