Author: Anna & Mark

Barred Plymouth Rock

Barred Plymouth RocksBarred
Plymouth Rocks are another popular breed, although I’ve been less
thrilled with them than I thought I’d be.  These birds are billed
as dual-purpose egg and meat birds, but I’ve found that our two year
old birds lay only as well as our four year old
Golden Comets in the
winter (which is to say, not much.)  They also seem to be pretty
shoddy in the foraging department, spending sunny afternoons drowsing
on their perches while the Golden Comets are busy scratching in the
dirt.  (Can you tell that I really value productivity?)




On the other hand, we
might be more pleased with this variety if we
used them the way they were intended.  Until World War II, Barred
Plymouth Rocks were probably the most popular birds in the entire
United States and they were usually kept in mixed farmyard
flocks.  Each year, farmers would let the hens set and produce
chicks, then eat the males as they reached full size.  If that
sounds like your chicken flock, Barred Plymouth Rocks might be worth a
shot.




Please leave a comment
if you disagree and think your Barred Plymouth Rocks are the cat’s
meow.  (Many people on the internet do seem to think so.) 
Meanwhile, check out our
homemade chicken
waterer
, providing
clean water to the whole flock.

Avian Aqua Miser suits chicks fine

Chick drinking from an automatic chicken waterer.

Last fall, Titus Blackwood emailed
me to ask if our
Avian Aqua Miser will work with day old
chicks.  “Well, I’m not sure,” I replied.  “But if you give
it a shot, can you take some photos and let me know?”



Closeup of chick drinking from an automatic chicken waterer.

Chicks drinking from a bucket watererIt
turns out that our automatic chicken waterers not only work with day
old chicks, they are vastly preferable to old-fashioned waterers. 
Titus raised over 150 laying hens on the Avian Aqua Miser, and
reports that she ended up with healthier birds than ever before. 
She was so pleased with the results that she changed all of her birds
over to nipple-based waterers.

“It’s easier to teach a day old chick than an older bird,” Titus
reports.  “And we’ve had significantly fewer pecking problems
since using the Avian Aqua Miser.”



Many thanks to Kristin
Mahony from
Ranch Alacrity and co-owner of Rocky Mountain Reindeer
for taking the photos. 
And of course, a big thank you to Titus who has since become an online
buddy!

Duckweed as chicken feed

Duckweed

Along with black soldier fly larvae and growing our own grains, duckweed is at the top of our list for this year’s chicken feed experiments.  This little plant was a ubiquitous part of my childhood since it grew wild in the ponds I played in.  I transplanted some into my own backyard water garden by the simple method of scooping a few leaves up into a quart jar and emptying them into their new home.  Given full sunlight and still water, duckweed will grow like crazy until it coats the surface of a pond and has to be scooped out to make room for other plants.  Suffice it to say that duckweed is easy to grow and doesn’t need much infrastructure after the original pond-building.


What I wasn’t aware of at the time is that duckweed is extraordinarily high in protein.  You’ll remember from my chart of protein content in chicken feed ingredients that corn is 9% protein and dry-roasted soybeans are 37% protein.  Well, depending on who you talk to (and presumably depending on the species of duckweed, since there are several), duckweed is 30 to 50% protein.  Wow!  I’ve read that duckweed can make up to 40% of a chicken’s diet, with 25% being more optimal — that means we’ll be paying 25 to 40% less for chicken feed once we get our duckweed operation up and running. One study suggests that duckweed may be best fed dried and I can envision drying stations where I just scoop duckweed out of the pond and toss it on a table in our hot summer sun.


Duckweed likes high fertility water, but that’s pretty easy to achieve.  Some folks take the graywater coming out of their kitchen sinks and channel it into duckweed gardens — the duckweed cleans the water while producing free chicken feed.  In my backyard water garden, I just threw several goldfish in the pond and the fish poop was sufficient to keep the duckweed growing like crazy.  If you are able to get your fish to reproduce (which mine did after a year or two), then you could even
give your chickens a fish now and then as an even higher boost of protein.

This post is part of our Homemade Chicken Feed series.
Read all of the entries: