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Types of Chicken Feeds

Bananas Type: Without the Peel
Bananas Type: Without the Peel

Chickens love fruit and vegetables and you can give them this daily. Our girls love: vegetable peels, bananas, apple cores, carrots and broccoli. You are safe to feed chickens pretty much any vegetable or fruit except any raw green peels (such as green potato peel) and any citric fruits such as oranges and lemons.

Beets Type: Raw
Beets Type: Raw

This is a list of almost everything you can feed a chicken. However, everybody's chickens have their own tiny brains full of likes and dislikes, so while one person's chickens may come running for grapes or watermelon, another person's chickens may turn up their pointy little beaks at it. Anything on this list is safe to feed and worth a try.

Berries
Berries

For homemade chicken feed, I recommend soaking the grains (also known as berries) for 24 hours, then allowing them 3 days to sprout. You can sprout them longer than 3 days, but you might run into issues with mold.

Bread
Bread

What To Feed Your Chickens. What chickens eat and what chickens should eat are not always the same thing. Chickens are omnivores. That means they’ll snarf down just about anything, or at least try to! I’ve seen a hen catch and slurp down a snake like spaghetti. I’ve seen a chicken snatch a toad by it’s leg and all of the other hens go in a raucous chase after it, only, at the end to ...

source: hencam.com
Breast and Tenderloin
Breast and Tenderloin

The breast is, well the breast. It is the biggest piece of meat of the chicken. The tenderloin is attached to the breast, between it and the rib bone. These are what chicken tenders (strips, fingers) are usually made of.

source: quora.com
Broccoli & Cauliflower
Broccoli & Cauliflower

Broccoli and Beyond Botanical name: Brassica As the leading member of the cruciferous family of vegetables, the word “broccoli” means “branch” or “arm” for the cross-shaped stems, like mini trees bearing the blossoms.

Cabbage & Brussel Sprouts
Cabbage & Brussel Sprouts

Cabbage or headed cabbage (comprising several cultivars of Brassica oleracea) is a leafy green, red (purple), or white (pale green) biennial plant grown as an annual vegetable crop for its dense-leaved heads.

Carrots
Carrots

The basis of any good chicken diet is a high quality poultry pellet . We feed our girls layers pellets which provide them with the right amount of protein and minerals to keep them laying eggs! Pellets normally contain: wheat, salt, maize, sunflower seed and oats.

Cereal
Cereal

Common energy sources in poultry feeds include cereals and fats and oils. Cereals Cereals are grasses that produce edible starchy grains, many of which can be used in poultry diets as an energy source.

Chicken Scratch
Chicken Scratch

Feed here is about $13 for starter/grower, $12 for layer, and $10 for scratch. Scratch is a treat.

Chickens Should not eat Anything Mouldy
Chickens Should not eat Anything Mouldy

4. Chickens should not eat green potatoes or green tomatoes. My chickens love mashed potatoes. They would eat it until it came out of their little chicken ears. I feed it them in moderation - left over cooked potato (including potato skins) is fine for chickens to eat but contains very few nutrients so isn't one of the best treats.

Chickens Should not eat Chocolate
Chickens Should not eat Chocolate

4. Chickens should not eat green potatoes or green tomatoes. My chickens love mashed potatoes. They would eat it until it came out of their little chicken ears. I feed it them in moderation - left over cooked potato (including potato skins) is fine for chickens to eat but contains very few nutrients so isn't one of the best treats.

Crumble
Crumble

You can use these feeds on your other farm animals, and you don’t need to worry if the chickens steal a bite. But definitely don’t use them as your sole chicken feed. Forms of feed. Feed comes in three forms: crumbles, pellets, and mash.

source: dummies.com
Drumsticks, Wings
Drumsticks, Wings

Drumsticks. Drumsticks are better because they are easy to eat and the meat is tender. Chicken breasts are the worst because the meat is tough and has no flavour. The wings and legs, which get the most exercise, are the best to eat; but I find that chicken wings are not convenient to eat if you are in a hurry.

source: yp.scmp.com
image: dvo.com
Grower Chicken Feed
Grower Chicken Feed

All of the starter feeds are labeled as Starter / Grower, and the feed stores view these two as one and the same feed. In that situation, just use this feed from day one to the time they start laying eggs, at which time you will need to switch to laying crumbles or pellets.

Layer Chicken Feed
Layer Chicken Feed

Brown's Layer Booster Chicken Feed Brown's Layer Booster Chicken Feed includes corn, soybean meal, wheat middlings, and other supplements. It also includes vitamins E, A, and D-3.

Mash
Mash

Mash is defined as a feed made from grains and other ingredients that is ground into small pieces. It is what pellets are made from, although it can also be bought by the bag. Some may feed it to chicks, especially if they are smaller, like bantams.

Mince
Mince

Raw minced chicken forms chicken meatballs for a change of pace. Photo Credit: tycoon751/iStock/Getty Images There's no sense mincing words -- chopping poultry into ever-finer pieces for minced chicken can be challenging.

Pellets
Pellets

How Much Feed do Chickens Require? Chickens like to eat several times a day. A standard-size hen will eat 1/4 to 1/3 pound of pellets a day. In addition to chicken feed, vegetables, tables scraps, and scratch feed are perfectly fine if given sparingly.

Shell Grit
Shell Grit

Grit is designed to help the chickens’ digestive system function well and break down the food as it should. The grit helps grind down the food in the gizzard, keeping their digestive system happy! Shell grit also gives your chickens’ calcium levels a boost – something that is crucial to your flock’s bone strength and eggshell strength.

Starter Chicken Feed
Starter Chicken Feed

Here's the complete breakdown of what nutrients do chickens need. How Much Feed do Chickens Require? Chickens like to eat several times a day. A standard-size hen will eat 1/4 to 1/3 pound of pellets a day. In addition to chicken feed, vegetables, tables scraps, and scratch feed are perfectly fine if given sparingly.

image: ebay.com
Thighs
Thighs

Chicken thighs can range in size, but for typical grocery store brands, figure that four bone-in, skin-on thighs will weigh about 1 ½ pounds. But each of those thighs will yield about 2 ½ to 3 ounces of meat (the rest of the weight is skin and bone).

source: myrecipes.com
Whole Bird
Whole Bird

Obviously if you are going to make your own homemade organic chicken feed you will want to use all organic ingredients. Beware of soy and fish meal, however. Soy has a high concentration of phyto-estrogen and this is of concern to some people.