Turning Trash Hauls Into Feed

SeanKriger

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Howdy!

This is going to be one of the craziest posts on the forum. I am a trash diver. I am so efficient at it that I can feed my family of 4 in about 20 minutes of work dumpster diving once a week and about an hour or two of cleaning the food (yes, I wash everything thoroughly). This provides a tremendous amount of food. Let me show you 3 hauls worth.

Pics!
The thing is, if I spent about 4 hours, two or three times a week, I could bring home 200-300lbs of scrap food every single week by hitting more locations. I am attempting to start a food share program where I am basically gifting some to people in need. But, that leaves a tremendous amount of vegetable product leftover in both scraps and just flat out stuff we won't eat. There are days when I could grab literally 100lbs of potatoes, bananas, apples, greens of all type, and more. I am genuinely not kidding when I say 100 lbs.

I have a flock of 24 birds. I have been feeding them scraps from my hauls on a treat basis. Albeit, probably more than I should, but the majority of their diet is feed. I want to figure out a way to turn large quantities of food scraps into legitimate substitutes for feed where I can cut back their store-bought feed to only 20-30% of their total feed. Granted, I will still supplement with calcium and grit as needed.

A couple of avenues here. Any feedback is great.

I can put rotting meat scraps into a 50 gallon drum, let flies infest it (or I purchase some type of bug that would infest it- any ideas?), cut holes in the bottom, and let the bugs come out into the coop and get eaten all but immediately.

I would use an industrial apple crusher to grind products into much finer "chips". I add them to 275 gallon totes to create worm towers. Where I am stuck here is the labor involved in getting the worms to the chickens. Reproduction speed isn't the issue. I could have 10-20 of these totes and just let it go slowly but surely. It's how to transfer the worms efficiently and then also the time to harvest the casings. All of these products I can sell, but really I am just after quickly turning food scraps into protein and this seems like alot of work.

What else am I missing. Has anyone tried to harvest significant amounts of trash to supplement feed? I am also going to have rabbit hutches which seem easier to substitute feed, but I sure do like eggs and chickens. Also, I should mention that production volume is of virtually no importance in this system. The trash is basically a free byproduct for me. I'd rather have 1/2 egg production and not use any feed if it were possible.
 
Unfortunately, feeding chickens nothing but scraps and larva and little to no poultry feed is a good way shorten their lives and sgns them up for a bunch of health problems.

If you're seeing low egg production, they're starving, chicken feed doesn't make them lay, it supports it.

I'd recommend you read up on what chickens need and don't need in their diet.
 
If you are sweint low egg production it can be the time of year feed issues sickness theres many things it could be.
 
To clarify, from what I got from the post, op isn't complaining about low production, they are simply stating that they don't mind if production is lower than it would be otherwise (although the point about diet not affecting production as long as its sufficient still stands)

@Perris might have some ideas seeing as she feeds fresh foods to her birds rather than commercial
 

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