Chicken Feed: How to Feed Chickens

Your chickens will need properly formulated chicken feed that is the correct type for their age, for growth, sustenance and to produce eggs if they are hens of egg laying age. There are many old wives tales and alternative views on feeding, some say it’s marketing that has created all of these feeds and hens will survive well on wheat and others will say their grandad never had layers pellets and just fed his hens kitchen scraps! Formulated poultry feeds didn’t exist until recently, primarily created thanks to commercial research on hens diets as we tried to squeeze more and more eggs out of hens.

Chickens were often fed home made grain mixes before the seventies.

In days gone by though when ‘grandad fed scraps’, pure breeds were kept for eggs and they were fed grain mixes or dried mash chicken feed that had meat or fish meal added to increase the protein content. Hens would free range over a large area and could also supplement their diet with what they could forage. Bugs, insects and worms are all valuable sources of protein, not forgetting a good selection of greens providing vitamins and minerals.

“Grandad’s chickens didn’t get chicken feed and survived on kitchen scraps but they could free range to top up their diet on protein, vitamins, minerals and calcium from the fields or orchards they grazed. They didn’t produce anything like the number of eggs modern hybrid hens or some pure breeds produce.”

So in short, if you don’t feed a proper formulated layers feed to your hens, they won’t be able to keep up the demands that egg-laying puts on their bodies.

Layers Feeds and Protein

Layers PelletsChickens require protein to produce feathers  and eggs as well as to grow. The amount of protein in their diet is important and you will see on the ingredients on the back of bags of commercial feeds the percentage of protein that they contain. It is higher in ‘Growers Pellets’ for example to enable chickens to grow and produce feathers.  You will find that chickens stop laying eggs when they moult (lose their feathers and regrow new) as they are diverting protein from egg production to feather production. During the moult, you can scatter a handful of cat kibble in the run which helps them to top up with protein. Do not use dog food as most of the protein is derived from cereals.

Topping up a feed container

Commercial feeds contain the right balance of nutrients & can be fed ad-lib in hoppers if kept dry. This one has a rain hat.

Commercial chicken feeds have been well researched and contain the correct balance of minerals and nutriets required by chickens as well as sufficient protein and calcium which is essential for egg shell production. Layers pellets for example are around 16% protein. Wheat is about 10% protein and lacks essential vitamins that are required by chickens.

Formulated feeds come as pellets or mash and should be fed ad-lib so hens can take what they want as they need it. This type of feed must be kept dry or it will soon spoil. The feeder and rain hat shown above is the only sort I have found that really does keep the feed dry. Most have a hole in the top of the hat for a handle or for hanging and this lets water in. A feeder and rain hat similar to this one can be bought from Omlet.

Eggs are made up of around 80% protein so if there’s a shortage of protein in their diet, egg laying will be the first thing they your girls cut back on!

There is more information on the poultykeeper.com site which has a very good page of feeding chickens and chicken feed.

Mixed corn

mixed corn for chickensMixed corn is usually 80 to 90% wheat and 10 to 20% maize. It is useful as a scratch feed, it keeps hens active, scratching around looking for it but should only be considered a treat. A handful per hen thrown late afternoon helps them to have a full crop overnight.

The maize (yellow in colour) is very fattening but can be useful during very cold weather to help your hens keep warm – I increase my girls’ ration of corn when it is cold over the winter, after they have finished moulting (they need lots of protein during the moult) since they are not laying eggs and need a little extra fat to burn in order to keep warm.

If you feed too much corn, your hens will get fat and fat hens don’t lay eggs!

Household scraps

Feeding household scraps is no longer allowed according toi DEFRA and can be a bit hit and miss anyway. You don’t really know what a hen is getting and the diet is very unbalanced. It is for this reason that scraps used to be mixed into a mash by using layers mash and water (which can be warm in winter). The mixture should be a sort of crumbly mix, not too wet but not too dry. Feeding scraps should be limited to at most 25% of a hens diet so as not to tip the balance too far one way or another.

Greens

chickens and fresh greensAmple green stuff should be provided for your hens. Grass cuttings, weeds and off-cuts from cabbages, cauliflowers and other greens can be provided at minimal cost. Lettuce should be fed in moderation because it has very little nutritional value (very little Protein and Energy / Calories) and avocado pear is poisonous to hens but most other greens that come from the kitchen will be appreciated by your girls. Try hanging greens in their run, just a little higher than they can reach. As they eat them, they will need to jump to get the last bits so will be getting exercise at the same time as their greens! Win-win!

If you have an area in which you can grow cabbages in your garden, it may be worthwhile thinking about growing a row for the winter. Cabbages will sit there in the cold, perfectly preserved until picked. You will need to keep them covered with fleece when there are cabbage white butterflies around but don’t worry if they are a little eaten, the chooks won’t mind!

Mealworm treats

Many chicken keepers like to buy mealworms or chicken treats containing these. Chickens love these and are easily tamed by using such tasty treats, however you should keep in mind that animal by-product regulations mean that mealworms are not really allowed to be fed to poultry.

427 Comments

  1. Hi I have had my 5 chickens for 4 weeks they were 2o weeks p.o.l. they have layers pellets and they never stop eating then 3 days ago they have hardly eaten anything, which for the speckeldy is strange, so to day i gave them some layers mash mixed with water and they scoffed it up,I dont want them to have mash so have took it away now,any idea why, they seem fine orther wise.

  2. Hi my mother-in-law feeds her hens every day, bread and grated cheese, lettuce, other veg, as well as mash and corn but they don’t really eat much of the mash and corn. I’ve told her this isn’t right, am i right? we feed our hens mash and twice aweek some greens.

    • Yes, many of the older generation (I mean no disrespect) will do this because that’s how it used to be in days gone by.
      In days gone by, we didn’t have formulated feeds that (after research from commercial egg production) contained everything a hen needed to thrive. By feeding scraps, the hen is getting a mixed bag nutritionally and modern hybrid hens need the right diet to be able to perform in the egg laying department. Even the books written in the 1930’s provide chapters on mixing feeds for hens for the best production and they were very exact so as to get the right nutrition. Cod Liver Oil was often added for Vitamin D and Fishmeal for Protein (banned by DEFRA since the BSE scare)

      It’s actually illegal now to feed anything that has come out of your kitchen according to DEFRA. You can of course feed allotment scraps or garden scraps but not kitchen scraps… even from a vegetarian kitchen!

      I’d never be disrespectful to your Mother-in-Law but I’d say you were doing the right thing with your feeding. It is false economy to scrimp on layers feed to have poor egg production.

  3. Hi I heard (from a vet) that feeding leafy greens could harm your chickens because it always blocked their crope, this happened several time to my one hen who i have recently had to have her put down because of it. Also i bought two gold silkies their currently 14 1/2 weeks old /15 weeks this thursday, In a few days i am about to run out of grower pellets (supplier refusing to get more), will it be ok to slowly swap them now onto layer pellets.

    • If they are eating woody stems of grass / greens then yes, the crop can get impacted. Keep grass cut short so that the fresh growth is sweet and nutritious.

      They should only be switched to layers pellets when they are finished growing and about to lay. Layers pellets has too much calcium in it and not enough protein for growing birds.

  4. hi ya i have only one hen at the moment but getting somemore very soon. the one i have has got the runs i am feeding her on pellets and the odd greeds now and then can you help me please. x

  5. My chickens won’t eat
    since I mix their food ( organic layer pellets) with Flubenvet 1%
    they hardly touch their pellets.
    Normally they would eat all the food I give them!
    I left them in their cages so that they can’t eat anything else
    could you please help
    They are Marans, a Cuckoo and a Belle one.
    lucie

    • When they get hungry, they should eat them. I am surprised they can tell, most don’t seem to know.

      Make sure you remove all other treats / food so they have only the medicated feed to eat.

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