I can hardly imagine a better treat than cheese. It may be a little too salty but need not be.
At one time, I had an abundance of milk and daily turned it into a simple cheese for the chickens. They did a very good job of turning that cheese into eggs.
Chickens certainly can become spoiled pests but they can also learn to behave in ways that make life easier for their keepers/backyard neighbors. My chickens are not let out before afternoon. You would hardly know that you are in a backyard with chickens thru the morning, unless there is an egg song going on (or a "someone is in MY nest" song
).
Mid afternoon comes and it is a different story - they expect to be allowed out with every "sighting"
of me.
I give them treats to get them back into the coop in the evening. They always get a treat and they are happy to return to the coop. In the winter, I show up a couple of times in the late afternoon because it is dark out with only the light on in their coop, and because treats in cold weather make more sense.
If you don't think that we can adversely affect our pets' nutrition, you haven't been counting the overweight dogs and cats in your neighborhood. And, not only are we interested in having healthy birds and good-looking lawn ornaments, but we are also expecting some egg production from them.
They are like little kids . . . or, more like
lazy adults
, perhaps. Anyway, they want easy calories and that's about the extent of their
wants. I suppose that they are motivated by instincts to chase and eat a frog or peck around curiously on the ground but, they can really load up on food that isn't especially good for them. And, important to most of us, they can deprive themselves of the
excess good nutrients, beyond their own needs, that they can use to make eggs.
Production hens have an important
capacity for food. They can use extra nutritious food to make eggs or they can just get fat.
Steve