Wannabefree
Little Miss Sunshine
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- Sep 27, 2010
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Corn=carbs, which produces the heat. So, anything heavy on carbs. Cooked potatoes, bread, etc.
Cool they had potatoes tonight and carrots which is a root veggie. They do love oatmeal (not the packaged kind but the good old fashioned quick oats ) so that would be an option too. I am thinking that meat and greens should go in one bin and a second bin for carbs so I can make sure they get enough of that too.Wannabefree said:Corn=carbs, which produces the heat. So, anything heavy on carbs. Cooked potatoes, bread, etc.
That's another good one for us. I can get a 20lb bag of rice for $4 up here and that will last for a while since it puffs up when cookedWannabefree said:Mine loved warm rice too and that's heavy on the carbs as well.
Cool I am glad I decided to post I was really worried about starting this because I don't want to hurt them but since they live in a fruit orchard and pasture on 2 acres I figured they have enough free range for when there is no snow so my biggest concentration of feed will be in winter and they won't need as much the rest of the year. I will still mix feed for them but I feel better about feeding them foods I know then pellets that I don't know what's in it.Wannabefree said:That sounds like a great plan Lily. My birds do better with choices too.
I am finding that out. They often turn their nose, or beaks lol up at the shelters I build for them and would choose to perch on top of them or actually on the field fencing itself even today where the top temp was 40 degrees. All last winter they were out even in the winter as long as I shoveled them paths so they wouldn't get stuck in the deep snow lol.FarmerJamie said:chickens are a LOT more robust than people give them credit for