Cost Effective, High-Protein Food Sources

ericanicole806

In the Brooder
Nov 1, 2022
10
10
46
We feed our chickens a mix/mash made at our local feed mill.

Their egg shells are pretty thin, and they aren't laying often.

We want to up the protein source, assuming that could be the reason. What sre some of the best inexpensive ways to add crude protein to their feed mix?
 
I don't have nutrition info for the feed, but corn is the most noticible just by looking at it...which may or may not be helpful to know! Sorry!

We have 7 hens:

1 Rhode Island Red, 2 years old

3 Easter eggers, 1.5 years old

3 others are around 1 year old - 1 is a Rhode Island Red and 2 are Cinnamon Queens
 
Good questions from @nuthatched I'll add, where are you, north or south of the equator?

Their egg shells are pretty thin,
That usually means a lack of calcium. Do you offer oyster shell free choice?

and they aren't laying often.
Need to know more about your situation. Time of year, what is their laying history? What changes in laying have you seen?

We want to up the protein source, assuming that could be the reason. What sre some of the best inexpensive ways to add crude protein to their feed mix?
Protein might be an issue but to me protein is more about the size of the eggs versus the frequency. If you are buying it, protein is usually not inexpensive. You do not want to feed them too much of anything to mess up their balanced diet. Not that I'm sure from your post that they are getting a balanced diet. Still, you don't want to overdo anything.

For high protein I first look to meat. Scraps or leftovers from your kitchen? Can you legally harvest wildlife, such as predators or even mice? Look up raising Black Soldier Fly Larva. You can grow those by using rotting meat if you can handle the smell. Check a vegetarian website for high protein foods, can you grow any of them?

I don't have nutrition info for the feed, but corn is the most noticible just by looking at it...which may or may not be helpful to know!
You'll get a lot of hate on this forum for corn, but not from me. Corn is a valuable component in livestock feed, including chickens, and is the grain that fueled different civilizations. The protein content is not that high though so it needs to remain a relatively low percentage of the overall feed.
 

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