Of course. It has even less expensive than the standard options.But is there a pragmatic approach to reducing exposure without ceasing to exist?
My waterer and feed bowls are stainless steel that were designed for other purposes bought at resale stores... Taking into consideration your feeders, drinkers, all sorts of poultry supplies, feed, feed bags, your land, etc.
My chicken supplies are mixed - some plastic or plastic components and some nonplastic. I've been replacing things as I find good alternatives.
I haven't found a good solution for feed bags. Yet.
My land, thankfully, has only a little of endless procession of plastic in various stages of brittleness and shattering that I've been cleaning off my parent's farm for many years now. Its a sad, frustrating process. This is what started me on the anti-plastic bandwagon far more than any health concerns.
Later, my mother's health problems resulted in extensive searching for products that didn't have formaldehyde, parabans, bronopol, quinoline, Cl+Me, or black tar. Over a year of constant, very intense itching and endless dr visits with a fragile woman in her 80's in year 2020 before we discovered she was allergic to all of these plus a few other things. Why a dermatologist didn't do allergy testing mystifies me. Then months of trying to decrease exposure to these destroyed my faith in (or blindness toward) the effects of "safe" chemicals and products.
And for what? Usually for poorer results that cost more in every way except, sometimes, the initial purchase price.