Sunday, December 14, 2014

Final Chicken Blog






 
               This will be my final blog post. I have had fun writing about my chickens and expanding my knowledge of them. For my final post I decided to figure out what types of chickens I have. I spend a lot of time with my chickens so I thought it would be good to know how to treat each chicken differently; so that each one could be in as good of health as possible.
Let’s start with the rooster the white and brown one. He is part Golden Phoenix and part Rhode Island White. Which is why he is a couple different colors. The big black and white chicken is a Silver Back (“Chicken Breeds”).Golden phoenix is the pheasant looking chicken. The ten brown chickens are 10 Sex-links (“Types of…Chickens).

 

Work Cited

"Chicken Breeds." BackYard Chickens. Huddler Lifestyle, n.d. Web. 14 Dec. 2014.

"Types of Chickens. A Review of Different Breeds of Chickens." Types of Chickens. A Review of Different Breeds of Chickens. N.p., n.d. Web. 14 Dec. 2014.

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Horses and Chicken Feed

               Saturday my horses were out and Greaser (the brown boy) likes to dip his head into the chicken pen and watch them. He is fairly tall so it’s easy for him to hang his head over the fence and look in. He will stand their watching them as they cluster together and peck the ground. Greaser also like to try and nudge me out of the way when I am trying to put in feed in for the chickens. He likes the corn in their feed.
               I often wonder what’s in my chickens feed. I think their feed is nearly all corn. Corn all day has got to be boring for them. So, I decided to find out what is actually in the chicken feed.
Main Feed:
Alfalfa meal (high protein, good for winter), Corn (mainstay for chickens, store whole), Field peas (for protein, to avoid soybean use), Wheat, Oats and/or Barley (less than 15% of total diet together),
Things Sometimes Added:
               Aragonite or feeding limestone (for calcium), Oyster shell (calcium, free feed), Salt, Probiotic (feed them fermented dairy foods, or fermented vegetables), Crab meal (small amounts provide protein and minerals), Flax seed (omega-3), Mineral supplements, Kelp (mineral source), Fish meal (helps boost protein and omega-3s), Cultured yeast (B vitamins, minerals and digestive enzymes)
(Ware)

There are quite a few things in the feed that I didn't know was there. I often throw out some other stuff to the chicken though. Leftovers from dinners I collect for them and toss out. I’ll throw out stall bread crust, orange peels, and old lettuce or squash of the sort. The chickens love it; it’s their favorite thing to get new flavors. They’re not picky about what I give them, they will peck then eat whatever is thrown in as long as they can swallow it. That’s what’s cool about chickens.
 
Work Cited
Ware, Lauren. "How to Make Your Own Chicken or Poultry Feed." How to Make Your Own Chicken or Poultry Feed. About.com, n.d. Web. 05 Dec. 2014.