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- #21
Still alive and well...
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That's a very idyllic picture. I love it. You're so lucky to have such a great space to freerange on!
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Still alive and well...
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) Both the turks and chooks are extremely wary of anything new (eat canned peaches, but growl at a whole one tossed in run). So, when Cass sat her Fuchsia Princess plants out on the back deck, for the summer, she figured the chooks would eat any bugs off of it and otherwise ignore it.
However, after a tentative bite by the roo, the chooks fell to it and ate several leaves/little stems, each (no flowers). How did they know this was not only safe, but tasty? Something like it etched in their Jungle Fowl hard wiring? We'd never introduce an `unknown' to the flocks in an enclosed run (like humans - `man, I was just so bored I started shooting up...') as they might well poison themselves by `mindless' pecking. Out on the range they are pretty picky eaters, here.
There are many species of clover. It could be that one particular species may be bad for poultry. I've never heard of one, but given that there are many species I suppose it's possible. Most are very good poultry feed.
Well, since one can buy "chicken pasture seed" that is about 1/4 ladino clover seed, I suspect someone didn't do his/her research before writing this article. There are a lot of lists out there that completely contradict one another, many compiled from nothing more than incidental data, so I would take any of them with a grain of salt and do more research before taking them at surface value.
I figure any animal that can injest as much styrafoam as my birds have and have no ill effects can not be poisened by anything short of arsenic. And even that some old red hen would probably gobble it up and wander happily off to find a patch of clover.