Topic of the Week - Feeding mealworms, bugs etc.

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sumi

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Chickens are omnivorous and when given the chance, will happily devour a surprising assortment of bugs and small animals. I've seen mine eat frogs, small snakes, mice… Most of us prefer to be a bit less adventurous when meeting our flocks' craving for meat and stick to providing things like mealworms, crickets, roaches, etc. This week I would like to hear your thoughts and practices on feeding "live" treats. What do you offer your flocks, what can you feed them safely, etc?

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Pic by @aoxa


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We had a large chicken run beside our barn, when I was a kid. Right beside the run was an old rusted out vehicle with bushes and small trees growing all around and through the floorboards and wind shield opening(windshield was long gone). It was like an old milk van. Anyway, A man came to remove it and this was a big event for us kids, I don't know why. He hooked it up and began to move it. It hadn't moved far when mice began to scamper out, A lot of mice. Being kids, we instantly started chasing them. I don't know what we would have done if we had caught one, get a rabies shot I guess. Trying to get to safety, they all headed for the barn, but to get there they had to cross the chicken run. We were all shocked at how quickly those hens dispatched and consumed the mice.:eek: It was like feeding time at jurassic park. They were fighting over them and ripping them to pieces. Some were swallowed whole. We (the kids) thought it was the coolest thing we had ever seen. Our mom, however, was horrified and would not eat eggs that weren't from the grocery store after that. That was the day I became fascinated with chickens. These are not just birds... They are my own little private flock of feathered DINOSAURS.
:celebrate
 
My flock gets a daily treat of dried mealworms and sunflower seeds, but as for "live" treats they are on their own. I provide the opportunity for that by letting them forage in the yard and in my 50' x 60' garden. I especially like this time of year when the days warm up just enough that some bugs come to life and the flock finds them and eats them before they have a chance to reproduce. I flipped over a large pile of weeds in the garden the other day and there were hundreds of baby spiders running around underneath. The flock had them devoured in minutes.

Though I have read some bugs and earthworms can cause parasites I do not discourage my birds from eating anything that comes natural to them. I believe a diverse diet (even with the risk of parasitic involvement) is much more healthy than a cooped-up feed only diet.
 
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At my house, we are always setting aside fresh venison from what we process. We freeze it in little baggies for the girls & alternate between that, heads of cauliflower, raw sunflower seeds and freeze dried mealworms. Nothing flips the Velocirapor switch faster, I have to say! We allow them to free range (usually daily in good weather) & we supervise to both keep them outta trouble & watch out for predators. If they chase down crickets, spiders or other bugs, they are welcome to 'em. I've had many a gasp in horror as one or another kills & sucks down a baby snake like the spaghetti scene from 'Lady & the Tramp'. (Man, that just makes me want to gag just thinking about it!) I try not to give them worms or slugs, but I can't stop them from eating them if they discover them. They LOVE to scratch around in the garden as we prepare the soil for planting & we usually come across all kinds of larvae creepy crawlies. When we get extremely lucky, we dig up those ghostly white cicada larvae! Man THAT'S a treat they love!! When it's cicada season, the sound of crunching can be heard all over the yard as the girls discover 'chicken potato chips'!
 
When feeding extra protein do be careful with the forms of live protein that you chose to feed your chickens. Meal worms are the larva stage of the DARKLING BEETLE and both meal worms and darkling beetles are a major pest and a serious disease vector in commercial chicken houses, besides the meal worms destroy the very chicken house that they live in by boring into the walls of the chicken house in order to pupate. This behavior is more pronounced when using the deep litter method of of chicken manure control.

Don't take my poor word for this, research it and find out for yourself. Also other things like Earth worms, slugs, crickets, snails, and grasshoppers all transmit disease bacteria and intestinal worms to your flock.
 
Watch a broody hen. Her chicks are running all over the place at just a couple of days old. If she finds a tidbit, she eats it and they join right in. Doesn't matter what it is - bugs, dirt, grass, weeds, worms, scratch tossed on the ground - if she's eating they'll be right there at the dining room table with her. If they find a mud or water puddle, they take a drink. Mama's not peeling, coring and chopping apples - my chickens and chicks were the best at keeping our orchard cleaned up. She's not checking things for germs, and measuring out how much grit to give them. They find what grit they need - and in sizes just for them - in the dirt they're playing in and exploring. But their main meal still comes from the feeder, where the supply is never ending and they never have to wonder if it's going to be there.

I guess I just think all the fussing is our imposition of our own food prejudices. In moderation, of course, with full access to the well balanced nutrition they get from a quality commercial or homemade feed, none of this hurts them one bit. <shrugs> But that's just me. It's worked better for me raising chicks this way than I managed with the flock that I over managed and over coddled. :idunno
 
Mine will consume almost all insect fare, with exception of insects that have red on them. Insects with red here typically use compounds they collect from milkweed to keep predators at bay.

May through June in some years I have placed a light near roost of young game chickens. Night flying insects (May Beetles mostly) then come into range where chickens can pick them off from their roost. Some nights allow for very rapid crop fill. This seasonal and not well suited for feeding more than a few birds at a time.

When working on beehives some of the chickens follow me and wait for me to drop burr comb. They consume the drone brood very well. I also have been throwing scratch at base of beehive to encourage chickens inspecting area for insects. Hope is to use that as a measure for controlling hive beetles in and just before the pupal stage.

At work I have a lot of ponds and a river nearby where mayflies (burrowing mostly) emerge in mass. Chickens really like those.

Recently I have begun exploring the use of mass harvested Japanese Beetles as eats. The beetles do not keep well outside of a freezer so working on ways to increase their density and dry them so they can be kept year round. Below is an ongoing thread working on the procedure.

https://www.backyardchickens.com/threads/making-feed-from-japanese-beetles.1223688/
 
Just my personal preference, but I think some folks just worry too much about what their chickens are eating, aren't eating, etc.
Of course, I do NOT suggest feeding chickens things that will obviously harm them. And I am also not going to encourage folks to feed their chickens potato chips, noodles, ice cream, etc.

I do love to dig for all sorts of live bugs for my chickens to enjoy :) My chickens will also eat snakes, frogs, lizards, mice, etc. :lol:

My chickens free range dusk till dawn, and boy do they get their crops filled! They forage on grass, weeds, leaves, under fruit trees, so many types of insects, etc.
They also have access to feed and water 24/7. I prefer Purina :)

My flock is also occasionally fed bird seed and other treats. They get table scraps every evening. I always leave at least two waterers out (in the yard and in the coop). But some of my chickens just prefer puddles :rolleyes: :p

Have a blessed day :D
 

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