I have just completed my 1st chicken tractor. I am wondering what types of feeders would be best for 20-25 broilers? I want a design where there would be minimal wastage. Any suggestions out there?
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I cut a 6 foot section of gutter and capped the ends. I only feed twice a day so needed room for all birds. After 6 weeks I added another 4 footer. I had old gutters so it was cheapI have just completed my 1st chicken tractor. I am wondering what types of feeders would be best for 20-25 broilers? I want a design where there would be minimal wastage. Any suggestions out there?
I don't mean to be argumentative, but I would like a clarification. I was under the impression that the purpose of a chicken tractor was to move the chickens around so they would scratch up and fertilize different areas of your property. If they are scratching, aren't they digging for and eating natural food. If you feed them, don't they stop scratching aggressively for food? (Just curious as mine free range in a contained orchard but I did contemplate tractors at one point)
Thanks for the clarification. That's just what I was looking for.If you live in an area where you don't have feral chickens living and reproducing in the wild the chances are that the forage there cannot possibly support the chickens without supplemental feeding.
Additionally, if you do have feral chickens living and reproducing in the wild you will notice that they are game/junglefowl types -- light, active breeds that neither produce many eggs nor develop a meaty carcass.
Tractors are used in the management of meaties as a means of spreading their copious manure over more ground than a confinement system, moderately supplementing their enormous feed intake, and keeping them a little more active than they might be otherwise in hope of warding off leg problems due to their insanely-fast growth rate.
@U_Stormcrow has some figures on feed consumption in a free range environment.
I do - and I'm not using "meat breeds", though I have free ranged CornishX - they don't much care for it, the lazy {explicatives}. You can see my flock in my Sig below, I keep it updated with hatchings and cullings.If you live in an area where you don't have feral chickens living and reproducing in the wild the chances are that the forage there cannot possibly support the chickens without supplemental feeding.
Additionally, if you do have feral chickens living and reproducing in the wild you will notice that they are game/junglefowl types -- light, active breeds that neither produce many eggs nor develop a meaty carcass.
Tractors are used in the management of meaties as a means of spreading their copious manure over more ground than a confinement system, moderately supplementing their enormous feed intake, and keeping them a little more active than they might be otherwise in hope of warding off leg problems due to their insanely-fast growth rate.
@U_Stormcrow has some figures on feed consumption in a free range environment.